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18/05/2009

Why almost a million children continue to die each year from avoidable accidents or violence, and a report on the dancing plague where people danced themselves to death.

Every year almost a million children die as a result of violence or accidents 鈥 many of which could have been prevented. Yet again there is new research showing that millions of children in the world are injured in accidents, but why doesn鈥檛 this research get translated into action on the ground? Professor Barry Pless joins Health Check to discuss the need for less talk and more action.

There鈥檚 also a discussion on why parents in Vietnam can get away with taking their two year olds on motorbikes without even wearing a helmet.

Kalaish Satyarthi accuses the Indian government of not doing more to end the suffering of the ten million child labourers.

And the medical historian John Waller, joins Claudia Hammond to discuss the strange case of the dancing plague which struck Strasbourg in the 16th century and its modern day equivalents of psychogenic illness and hysteria. In 鈥淎 Time to Dance, A Time to Die鈥, Waller reveals how people from the Medieval German city danced themselves to death.

BOOK:
It's A Time to Dance A Time to Die
by John Waller
(Published in paperback by Icon Books ISBN 978-184831053-7)

26 minutes

Last on

Tue 19 May 2009 00:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 18 May 2009 09:32GMT
  • Mon 18 May 2009 15:32GMT
  • Mon 18 May 2009 19:32GMT
  • Tue 19 May 2009 00:32GMT

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