Elizabeth Adams & Mia Christopher
Make Science Make Sense
We're Elizabeth and Mia, the hosts of Make Science Make Sense. We help make sense of important and socially relevant scientific studies in a way that doesn't demean the data or intimidate the average person. We want to make the results of scientific studies simple, meaningful, relevant, and sometimes actionable for anyone who appreciates evidence and its applications to practical living.
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Why People Die After Drug Raids: The Link Between Drug Supply Disruption and Overdose Spikes 02.06.2026 44:54
Dr. Jennifer J. Carroll heard the same story in her interviews with people who overdosed on opioids and were being treated in emergency departments: their supplier was arrested. In Episode 6, Dr. Jennifer J. Carroll discusses research measuring the relationship between police drug seizures and drug overdoses in the city of Indianapolis. Using police records of overdose and public records of overdo...
Addressing Trauma to Heal Military Veterans Struggling with Addiction and PTSD 19.05.2026 33:03
Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, and alcohol or drug problems often co-occur, or exist together, and military veterans experience these challenges at higher rates than civilians. For years, research has suggested that veterans don’t always benefit from PTSD treatments in the same way that civilians do, pointing to a need to learn more about the treatments that work for them. Today, we talk...
Kids as the Targets of Junk Food Advertising: Lessons From Chile 05.05.2026 43:27
In our media-saturated world, our kids are impressionable targets for advertisements for foods that are “high in” ingredients linked to obesity and nutrition-related disease: saturated fats, sodium, sugar, and calories. Children who see these ads have poorer health trajectories and higher rates of obesity. Unhealthy food ads contradict every parent’s best intentions to provide their child with a n...
Research Shows It Can Be Safe to Talk to Kids about Suicide 21.04.2026 27:05
In today’s world, children are surrounded by stressors that can jeopardize their mental health. National statistics show a troubling increase in mental health disorders and a growing incidence of suicide among younger populations over the past decade. Many parents and caretakers hesitate to discuss critical topics like death and suicide, fearing that such conversations may do more harm than good....
Signals from the Sea: Lobsters, Kelp, and Right Whales—Oh My! 07.04.2026 46:20
It’s easy to think of climate change as a simple story: rising temperatures and sea levels driven by human activity. But the reality is far more complex. Changes in the natural world are often uneven, unpredictable, and difficult to forecast. As oceanographer Nick Record explains in this episode, climate change unfolds in “fits and spurts” rather than in a smooth, linear trend. That complexity is...
Differences in How Our Cells Defend Against Damage from Air Pollution 23.03.2026 39:46
Air pollution isn’t just about what you breathe in today. It’s about how our bodies process toxins and the invisible changes that lead to diseases over time. In this episode, we talk to molecular and cell biologist Dr. Shaun McCullough to unpack how repeated exposure to pollutants can change how our cells respond, and why those effects aren’t the same for everyone. His laboratory group is develop...
A science communicator and an epidemiologist walk into a room ... 17.03.2026 13:08
How We Met and Why We Started Make Science Make Sense While translating complex research for broader audiences—and covering for each other as new moms—we noticed a pattern: incredible scientific work was being published every day, but much of it never reached the people who could benefit from it. That’s why we created @MakeScienceMakeSense, a podcast where each episode takes one scientific paper a...
Introducing Make Science Make Sense 04.03.2026 2:06
Make Science Make Sense is a new podcast that turns scientific evidence into meaningful insights for everyday life. The hosts, Elizabeth and Mia, focus on unpacking recent scientific research and drawing connections between evidence and actions related to our health, our food, our living environments, our behaviors, and other aspects of practical life. Takeaways Unpacking scientific research for e...
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