New YouTube Partner ResearchChannel Offers Heart-Warming Videos for February
February 16th, 2008 Leave a comment Visited 15 times, 1 so far today
Videos About Heart Disease and Heart Surgery from ResearchChannel Are Now Available on YouTube
Watch a successful heart transplant, see why heart disease is the number one killer of women and learn how cardiac cell replacement may mend broken hearts — all on YouTube this month.
No funny cat or kid videos here: ResearchChannel offers in-depth content from prestigious scholars and researchers around the country. Featuring programming provided by a consortium of leading research and academic institutions, ResearchChannel.org is the definitive source for academic learning online. And starting today, ResearchChannel is also offering many of its programs through YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/researchchannel.
For February, American Heart Month, ResearchChannel is featuring compelling programs about the heart on its new YouTube site:
“Women, Stroke and the Red Dress: Cerebrovascular Disease in Women” from Stanford University Medical Center
“New Heart, New Life” from the University of Washington
“How to Mend a Broken Heart: The Promissory Note of Cardiac Cell Replacement Therapy” from the University of Kentucky
ResearchChannel makes it easy to watch these videos when and how you want to: on air, online and on demand. Viewers can tune in through YouTube and iTunes U, but only ResearchChannel.org offers a live webstream and extensive video-on-demand library of more than 3,500 programs, including more than 60 programs on the heart.
About ResearchChannel
ResearchChannel links a growing global audience to the revolutionary developments, insights and discoveries of leading research and academic institutions through online, on-air and on-demand distribution formats. Founded as a way to share breakthrough research with the public, the ResearchChannel consortium includes world-renowned universities and research institutions. Programming ranging from technology and science innovations to fascinating arts and humanities topics is shared in its original form and without interruption.
Contacts
ResearchChannel
Erin Lodi, Communications and Public Relations
206-543-8907
erinlodi {at} researchchannel(.)org
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