Why is it so hard to cure the common cold?
- 573,055 Views
- 3,331 Questions Answered
- TEDEd Animation
Let’s Begin…
On average, adults catch more than 150 colds throughout their lives. Even with similar symptoms, the cause could be different each time. Common colds are caused by at least 8 different families of virus, each of which can have its own subtypes. How can so many different viruses cause the same illness? And is a cure even possible? Explore the two main strategies we employ to fight viruses.
Create and share a new lesson based on this one.
Additional Resources for you to Explore
The average person will have on the order of 200 colds in their lifetime, approximately 2-3 every year. The symptoms are typically mild—sore throat, runny nose, sneezing. And yet, for all their mundanity, colds put an outsize economic burden on society. In the US, colds account for around 20 million days of absence from work, 22 million days of absence from school, and 25 million doctor visits every year.
Scientists have been trying to crack the code of the cold for decades. But medical understanding of how best to treat a cold, or even how one is most likely to catch a cold, is still nebulous. Because more than 200 viruses are known to cause the symptoms attributed to the common cold, and because viruses are constantly mutating, researchers have yet to develop an effective vaccine that will eliminate this incessant ailment from our daily lives. However, new studies using the gene-editing tool CRISPR have made exciting headway in the design of an antiviral drug that could finally solve this medical mystery.
Scientists have been trying to crack the code of the cold for decades. But medical understanding of how best to treat a cold, or even how one is most likely to catch a cold, is still nebulous. Because more than 200 viruses are known to cause the symptoms attributed to the common cold, and because viruses are constantly mutating, researchers have yet to develop an effective vaccine that will eliminate this incessant ailment from our daily lives. However, new studies using the gene-editing tool CRISPR have made exciting headway in the design of an antiviral drug that could finally solve this medical mystery.

TED-Ed
Lesson Creator
New York, NY
Create and share a new lesson based on this one.
More from Getting Under Our Skin
20 Views
455,524 Views
254,781 Views
9,665,678 Views