- A lecturer tells the audience that it is National Take Care Week. He tells the story of a man who gets stung in his garden and the problems the man has when he seeks treatment at the doctor's office.
- A lecturer tells us that it's National Take Care Week, but take care of what? Probably your health, he surmises. Cut to Joe Doakes' household: he's been outside in the garden when a bee stings him. His brother-in-law, a worrier, thinks maybe it was a black widow spider, and he insists that Joe rush to see a physician. At the clinic, a nurse takes a long time filling out the forms and the doctor is tied up talking on the phone to a child. When the doctor finally examines Joe's hand, will it be too late?—<jhailey@hotmail.com>
- On National Take Care Week, our host looks at the fine line between when to worry about one's health and when not. In one such situation, Joe Doakes gets what he believes is a bee sting on his hand. But his brother-in-law convinces Joe's wife Mabel that perhaps it isn't a bee sting but something more serious, like a potentially fatal black widow spider bite. Joe and his brother-in-law rush down to the relief office to have it checked by a doctor. Joe's anxiety increases the slower the admitting nurse and doctor get around to checking his hand. The doctor's ultimate diagnosis makes Joe's worrying start all over again.—Huggo
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