Is There a Correlation Between Poverty and Heart Diseases? | Earth Lab
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Deprived areas now suffer from higher heart diseases - and the causes might be linked to emotional stress.
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Heartbreak Science
The latest research and incredible stories from around the world suggest that the heart is a far more complex and mysterious organ than was ever thought. With heart disease now the number one killer in the world today, this programme looks at the body's most important muscle in a revolutionary new way. From incredible connections between the heart and the mind to an intriguing system of neurons dubbed 'the little heart in the brain', this is the secret life of the human heart. Turning the tables on accepted medical opinion, Heartbreak Science explores whether people can die of a broken heart, whether our minds can cause heart disease and whether the heart could share some of the brain's crucial functions.
About BBC Earth Lab:
Welcome to BBC Earth Lab! Always wanted to know What the world’s strongest material is? Why trains can’t go uphill? Or How big our solar system really is? Well you’ve come to the right place. Here at BBC Earth Lab we answer all your curious questions about science in the world around you (and further afield too). As well as our Earth Lab originals we'll also bring you the best science and educational clips from the BBC science documentary archive including Forces of Nature with Brian Cox, James May's Things You Need To Know and plenty to keep the Docs away with Trust Me I’m A Doctor. And if there’s a question you have that we haven’t yet answered or an experiment you’d like us to try let us know in the comments on any of our videos and it could be answered by one of our Earth Lab experts. So whether you’re studying or just love to learn, BBC Earth Lab is your go to science channel – subcribe to never miss a video: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToEarthLab
You can also find the BBC Earth community on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Want to share your views with the team behind BBC Earth and win prizes? Join our fan panel here: http://tinyurl.com/YouTube-BBCEarth-FanPanel
This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes.
Subscribe to Earth Lab for more fascinating science videos - http://bit.ly/SubscribeToEarthLab
All the best Earth Lab videos http://bit.ly/EarthLabOriginals
Best of BBC Earth videos http://bit.ly/TheBestOfBBCEarthVideos
The Doctors Are In The House http://bit.ly/TheDoctorsAreInTheHouse
Best Of Earth Unplugged Videos http://bit.ly/BestOfEarthUnpluggedVideos
Check out the other two channels in the BBC Earth network:
BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthYouTubeChannel
BBC Earth Unplugged: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthUnplugged
Heartbreak Science
The latest research and incredible stories from around the world suggest that the heart is a far more complex and mysterious organ than was ever thought. With heart disease now the number one killer in the world today, this programme looks at the body's most important muscle in a revolutionary new way. From incredible connections between the heart and the mind to an intriguing system of neurons dubbed 'the little heart in the brain', this is the secret life of the human heart. Turning the tables on accepted medical opinion, Heartbreak Science explores whether people can die of a broken heart, whether our minds can cause heart disease and whether the heart could share some of the brain's crucial functions.
About BBC Earth Lab:
Welcome to BBC Earth Lab! Always wanted to know What the world’s strongest material is? Why trains can’t go uphill? Or How big our solar system really is? Well you’ve come to the right place. Here at BBC Earth Lab we answer all your curious questions about science in the world around you (and further afield too). As well as our Earth Lab originals we'll also bring you the best science and educational clips from the BBC science documentary archive including Forces of Nature with Brian Cox, James May's Things You Need To Know and plenty to keep the Docs away with Trust Me I’m A Doctor. And if there’s a question you have that we haven’t yet answered or an experiment you’d like us to try let us know in the comments on any of our videos and it could be answered by one of our Earth Lab experts. So whether you’re studying or just love to learn, BBC Earth Lab is your go to science channel – subcribe to never miss a video: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToEarthLab
You can also find the BBC Earth community on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Want to share your views with the team behind BBC Earth and win prizes? Join our fan panel here: http://tinyurl.com/YouTube-BBCEarth-FanPanel
This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes.
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