The segment from the 1942 Český zvukový týdeník Aktualita (Czech Aktualita Sound Newsreel) Issue No. 18 features the event Týden národního zdraví (A Week for National Health) organised by The Ministry of the Interior and The Health Institute of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia from 3 to 10 May 1942. The official goal of the event was to advocate for the importance of healthcare. The report covers the establishment of anti-tuberculosis stations in a number of places around the Protectorate. Footage of the measuring of body height and weight of patients. A showcase of how an X-ray station in Moravská Ostrava operates. Footage of doctors working with X-ray machines. A close-up of an X-ray image of the lungs. The segment includes footage of mobile X-ray cars set up for the treatment of child patients. Footage from a solarium intended for irradiating children with sunlamps.
The segment from the 1938 Československý zvukový týdeník Aktualita (Czechoslovak Aktualita Sound Newsreel) Issue No. 39 encourages blood donating in preparation for the anticipated war. The information given on the Czechoslovak Red Cross' activities is illustrated by footage of blood donations, Red Cross nurses taking blood samples, and the canning of blood for military purposes.
The segment shows the neurorehabilitation clinic of neurologist and addiction treatment pioneer Jan Šimsa, which he ran from 1901 to 1916 in Prague's Krč district. The central building, called Vita Nova, was designed and built in 1909 by architect Bohuslav Černý. Caught on camera are the arriving guests, patients exercising outdoors, and female patients swimming in the outdoor pool.
The segment from the 1938 Československý zvukový týdeník Aktualita (Czechoslovak Aktualita Sound Newsreel) Issue No. 31 shows a camp of Czech refugees fleeing the German-occupied borders. Charity events organised by the Czechoslovak Red Cross and the charity initiative České srdce (Czech Heart) provided food, clothing, books, and toys for the refugee children. Politicians Rudolf Beran and Vladislav Klumpar visit the camp. The following footage shows items donated through the refugee collection organised in Drtinovo gymnázium (Comprehensive school Drtinova) in Prague's Smíchov district.
The segment shows the Bakulův ústav pro výchovu životem a prací (Bakula Institute for Education through Life and Work) in Prague's Smíchov district. The first-ever film footage of the physically disabled writer František Filip, known as the Handless Frantík. František Bakula conducting his choir Bakula's Little Singers (Bakulovi zpěváčci).
The segment shows the founding figure of Czechoslovak orthopaedics, Jan Zahradníček, during an operation at the II. Surgical Clinic of the General University Hospital in Prague.