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B2 Upper Intermediate English 6:33 678 words Animation

Why was bloodletting so popular? - Stephanie Honchell Smith

TED-Ed · 270,699 views · Added 5 months ago

AI Summary

This video traces the long history of bloodletting as a medical practice, from ancient Greece through the 19th century. Learners will encounter English vocabulary related to medical history, including terms like humoral theory, phlebotomy, lancet, placebo effect, and germ theory. The video provides rich exposure to past tense narrative, chronological storytelling, and the language of scientific progress and medical skepticism in English.

Learning Stats

B2

CEFR Level

678

Total Words

401

Unique Words

6/10

Difficulty

Vocabulary Diversity 59%

Subtitles (35 segments)

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00:06

On December 14th, 1799, former US President George Washington woke struggling for breath, his throat searing with pain.

00:18

He died later that day, from what’s suspected to have been a badly infected epiglottis, but not before he was prescribed an enema, steam therapy, and rigorous bloodletting.

00:32

During four bleeding sessions, Washington lost approximately two liters— roughly 40%— of his body’s blood supply.

00:42

And yet this wasn’t totally out of the ordinary for the time.

00:46

Bloodletting was a pervasive medical practice that dated at least as far back as ancient Greece.

00:54

Physicians like Hippocrates believed good health came from balance among what they called the body’s four humors: yellow bile, black bile, phlegm, and blood.

01:09

They attributed bad health to humoral imbalance, so treatments included purging, peeing, enemas, and bloodletting.

Full subtitles available in the video player

Key Vocabulary (15)

bloodletting C2 noun

The act of withdrawing blood from a patient to prevent or cure illness; metaphorically, it refers to severe loss, especially of personnel or financial resources.

blood B2 adjective

As an adjective or noun adjunct, it describes something relating to, consisting of, or conveying the life-sustaining fluid in the body. It is frequently used to specify medical tests, familial relationships, or physiological functions.

bloodletting’s B2 noun (possessive)

The possessive form of 'bloodletting,' referring to either the historical medical practice of withdrawing blood to treat illness or a modern metaphor for a severe reduction in personnel, resources, or assets within an organization.

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