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This episode examines Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto through a medical lens, analyzing the film’s traumatic injuries, indigenous treatments (like using army ants as skin staples, honey, resins, and plant remedies), and the stages of wound healing that follow.
It also explores how European-introduced pathogens — smallpox, measles, influenza — devastated native populations and reshaped civilizations, highlighting the difference between surviving individual trauma and surviving new infectious threats.
By Diabetic Foot FilesThis episode examines Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto through a medical lens, analyzing the film’s traumatic injuries, indigenous treatments (like using army ants as skin staples, honey, resins, and plant remedies), and the stages of wound healing that follow.
It also explores how European-introduced pathogens — smallpox, measles, influenza — devastated native populations and reshaped civilizations, highlighting the difference between surviving individual trauma and surviving new infectious threats.