
Insights from recent episode analysis
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Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
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Total monthly reach
Estimated from 6 chart positions in 6 markets.
By chart position
- 🇧🇷BR · Careers#1181K to 10K
- 🇮🇩ID · Careers#117500 to 3K
- 🇬🇷GR · Careers#130500 to 3K
- 🇦🇷AR · Careers#131500 to 3K
- 🇭🇰HK · Careers#141500 to 3K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
1.1K to 7.5K🎙 Daily cadence·472 episodes·Last published 2d ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
3.5K to 25K🇧🇷40%🇮🇩12%🇬🇷12%+3 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
1.4K to 10K
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Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 10 epsHost
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Recent episodes
PHEC 462: Public Health Is Leadership
Jun 23, 2026
Unknown duration
PHEC 461: Created For Right Now, With Nandi Marshall, DrPH, MPH
Jun 16, 2026
Unknown duration
PHEC 460: From Newsroom to Policy, With Zack Stoycoff, MPA
Jun 9, 2026
Unknown duration
PHEC 459: How to Tell Better Stories, With Sally Perkins, PhD
Jun 2, 2026
Unknown duration
PHEC 458: Plain Language, Real Power
May 26, 2026
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/23/26 | ![]() PHEC 462: Public Health Is Leadership | Ask ten public health professionals to explain their work without using jargon, and you will get ten completely different answers. That is exactly the kind of honest, grounding conversation Dr. Huntley set out to have in this panel episode. What emerged was something more than a communication exercise. It was a compelling case for why explaining public health in plain language is itself an act of leadership. In this episode, Dr. Huntley brings together three rising voices in the field to explore one of the most practical questions in public health: how do we make people care about something they do not fully understand yet? Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() PHEC 461: Created For Right Now, With Nandi Marshall, DrPH, MPH | What does it look like to lead the nation's oldest and largest public health organization during one of the most turbulent moments the field has ever faced? Dr. Nandi A. Marshall, current president of the American Public Health Association (APHA), has a clear answer, and she delivers it everywhere she goes: you are here for a reason, and this moment needs you. In this episode, Dr. Huntley sits down with Dr. Marshall for a wide-ranging conversation that covers personal origin stories, public health advocacy, maternal and child health, workforce encouragement, and the future of the field. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() PHEC 460: From Newsroom to Policy, With Zack Stoycoff, MPA | What does a journalist watching a mother scream for her child outside a burning building have to do with mental health policy? For Zack Stoycoff, MPA, everything. That early morning moment on a street corner in Oklahoma planted a seed that eventually grew into one of the state's most impactful mental health advocacy organizations. In this episode of the PHEC podcast, Dr. Huntley sits down with Zack Stoycoff, founder and executive director of the Healthy Minds Policy Initiative, a mental health policy think tank based in Oklahoma. Their conversation covers his journey from breaking news reporter to healthcare lobbyist to policy entrepreneur, and what it actually takes to move the needle on mental health outcomes at the state and community level. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 6/2/26 | ![]() PHEC 459: How to Tell Better Stories, With Sally Perkins, PhD | What if the most powerful tool in your public health toolkit isn't a dataset or a policy brief? What if it's a story? In this episode, Dr. Huntley sits down with Sally Perkins, PhD, a storytelling expert who has spent years teaching healthcare and public health professionals how to communicate in ways that actually move people to act. From persuading vaccine-hesitant patients to presenting population-level data to legislators, Dr. Perkins brings practical, field-tested frameworks to a challenge that nearly every public health professional faces: bridging the gap between what we know and what our audiences understand. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 5/26/26 | ![]() PHEC 458: Plain Language, Real Power | It is one of the most important questions in the field right now, and one of the hardest to answer. Public health professionals know the work inside and out, but translating it for friends, neighbors, and policymakers? That is where many of us get stuck. In this episode, Dr. Huntley is joined by two leaders from Sisters in Public Health, a national organization advancing women in the public health field. Together, they explore one of the most pressing challenges of this moment: how do we explain public health in plain language, and why does it matter so much right now? The conversation is grounded, practical, and genuinely energizing. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 5/19/26 | ![]() PHEC 457: The Work Doesn't Wait, With Claude A. Jacob, DrPH, MPH | What does it take to lead one of the largest local health departments in the country when funding is disappearing, misinformation is spreading, and measles outbreaks are making headlines? In this episode, Dr. Huntley sits down with Dr. Claude A. Jacob, Public Health Director of the City of San Antonio Metropolitan Health District, for a candid, energizing conversation about resilience, cross-sector collaboration, and what it truly means to protect 2.1 million residents in the middle of a storm. Dr. Jacob and Dr. Huntley both share a deep commitment to communicating the value of public health in ways that resonate with everyday people. From understanding how zip codes shape life expectancy to explaining why kids need to be vaccinated, both agree that telling the public health story more effectively is one of the field's most urgent priorities right now. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 5/12/26 | ![]() PHEC 456: Health Is The Village, With Vanessa Guzman, MS | What happens when you stop chasing the terminology and commit fully to the work itself? In this episode of the PHEC Podcast, Dr. Huntley welcomes back Vanessa Guzman, biomedical engineer, CEO and president of SmartRise Health, and co-founder of Ella Es Health, for a candid catch-up conversation nearly two and a half years in the making. This is not a surface-level update. It is a rich, honest conversation about what it takes to build health-centered organizations that can withstand political shifts, funding uncertainty, and a rapidly changing healthcare landscape. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 5/5/26 | ![]() PHEC 455: No Longer Silent, With Elizabeth Soda, MD✨ | public health crisisadvocacy+3 | Elizabeth Soda, MD | CDC | — | public healthCDC+5 | — | 34m 26s | |
| 4/28/26 | ![]() PHEC 454: One Question, Many Voices Live From the Field✨ | public healthlive recording+3 | — | PHEC PodcastPublic Health & Epidemiology Consulting | South Carolina | public healthlive podcast+5 | — | 32m 59s | |
| 4/21/26 | ![]() PHEC 453: Public Health Is Political, With Susan Polan, PhD✨ | public healthadvocacy+4 | Susan Polan, PhD | American Public Health Association | — | public healthadvocacy+7 | — | 35m 41s | |
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| 4/14/26 | ![]() PHEC 452: Closing the Gap in Chicago, With Dr. Olusimbo "Simbo" Ige✨ | health disparitiespublic health leadership+4 | Dr. Olusimbo "Simbo" Ige | — | ChicagoNigeria+2 | health commissionerChicago+5 | — | 39m 48s | |
| 4/7/26 | ![]() PHEC 451: Simplifying AI for Public Health, With Kumba Sennaar, PhD✨ | artificial intelligencepublic health communication+3 | Kumba Sennaar, PhD | National Academy of MedicineWorld Economic Forum+1 | — | AIpublic health+5 | — | 32m 49s | |
| 3/31/26 | ![]() PHEC 450: Building Together: What Community Really Looks Like in 2026✨ | communitypublic health+4 | — | Catawba NationGullah Geechee Nation+1 | — | communitypublic health+4 | — | 11m 16s | |
| 3/24/26 | ![]() PHEC 449: Public Health Is Everywhere✨ | public healthstorytelling+3 | Alexandra PiotrowskiDr. Sarah Hartzell+1 | Piat Public Health | — | public healthepidemiology+3 | — | 36m 54s | |
| 3/17/26 | ![]() PHEC 448: Defending Scientific Integrity, With Kristie Ellickson, PhD✨ | scientific integrityenvironmental health+4 | Kristie Ellickson, PhD | PHEC Podcast CommunityPHEC Podcast Show Notes+1 | — | cumulative impactenvironmental burdens+4 | — | 32m 14s | |
| 3/10/26 | ![]() PHEC 447: Plain Language As Resistance, With Catherine Troisi, PhD, MS✨ | public health communicationepidemiology+4 | Catherine Troisi | Houston Health DepartmentAmerican Public Health Association | — | public healthcommunication+8 | — | 38m 36s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() PHEC 446: South Carolina Is Public Health, With Keisha Long and Jessica Seel✨ | public healthenvironmental health+3 | Keisha LongJessica Seel | South Carolina Public Health Association | — | public healthSouth Carolina+3 | — | 39m 29s | |
| 2/24/26 | ![]() PHEC 445: When Communities Define Public Health | "I don't feel seen when I'm here." When a Native Hawaiian elder says this during a diabetes appointment, it exposes what data alone can never capture. In this episode, Kandis Draw, Nina Lopez, and Dr. Augustina Mensa-Kwao challenge the textbook version of public health. From end-of-life planning in Chicago to community-led research in Hawai'i and youth mental health in Baltimore, they show what happens when we stop leading with programs and start leading with listening. This conversation is about trust before interventions, dignity alongside outcomes, and recognizing that communities have always practiced public health even when systems failed to acknowledge it. If you're ready to rethink what public health really looks like, this episode is for you. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 2/17/26 | ![]() PHEC 444: When Agriculture Meets Allergy Prevention, With Markita Lewis, MS, RD | What if we've been getting peanut allergies wrong all along? For years, parents were told to avoid peanuts. Schools banned them. Fear shaped policy. What if one of the most common childhood allergies could actually be prevented, with the right timing? In this powerful episode, Markita Lewis, registered dietitian and leader at the National Peanut Board, reveals the surprising science behind early peanut introduction and why most families still haven't heard the message. Despite strong evidence that introducing peanuts around four to six months can dramatically reduce allergy risk, the gap between research and real-world practice remains wide. We also unpack a controversial question: Do peanut bans in schools actually make kids safer, or do they create a false sense of security? This episode challenges long-held assumptions, connects agriculture to public health innovation, and may completely change how you think about prevention. If you work in public health, pediatrics, policy or you simply care about evidence-based prevention, this is a conversation you won't want to miss. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 2/10/26 | ![]() PHEC 443: Grief As A Public Health Issue, With Laura Vargas, MSW | What if grief isn't just personal, but a public health crisis hiding in plain sight? In this episode, Laura Vargas makes a powerful case for treating grief as a core public health priority. Drawing from her work supporting thousands of people navigating loss, especially substance-related deaths, she reveals how unaddressed grief fuels chronic disease complications, substance use, isolation, and burnout among both communities and care providers. Rather than pathologizing loss, Laura highlights the transformative power of culturally grounded peer support and community-designed spaces that help people feel seen, heard, and supported. This conversation challenges how we think about prevention, healing, and resilience and asks what becomes possible when we move grief out of silence and into community. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() PHEC 442: Science as a Human Right, With Robin Taylor Wilson, PhD, MA | In this powerful episode, cancer epidemiologist Dr. Robin Taylor Wilson unpacks the troubling rise of early-onset cancers and why ignoring symptoms can come at a devastating cost. The conversation goes far beyond individual risk, touching on the public's right to access science, what years of PFAS research are revealing about everyday chemical exposures, and why cutting cancer surveillance funding now would be a dangerous mistake. From student activism and misinformation to surprising data on trust in scientists, this episode is a timely reminder of what's at stake when science, policy, and public health collide. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Podcast Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 1/27/26 | ![]() PHEC 441: Making Public Health Plain, With Emily Edgar And Nicole Vick, EdD, MPH | Why is it still so hard to answer the simple question: "What is public health?" In this timely episode, Dr. Huntley is joined by two voices from different generations of the field to unpack why public health remains misunderstood and why that confusion has real consequences as budgets shrink and systems are dismantled. Emily Edgar, an MPH student in epidemiology, and Dr. Nicole D. Vick, a seasoned public health strategist and workforce advocate, offer grounded, human-centered explanations of public health rooted in collaboration, community, and equity. From One Health examples connecting human, animal, and environmental wellbeing to honest conversations about burnout, bias, and historical harm, this episode moves beyond textbook definitions into language people can actually understand. This conversation is a masterclass in explaining public health through stories that resonate why it matters, who it serves, and what's at stake if we can't clearly articulate our value. If you've ever stumbled trying to explain your work to family, funders, or policymakers, this episode is for you. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 1/20/26 | ![]() PHEC 440: Building Trust After Broken Promises, With Josie Williams | When everything fell apart in just 30 days, Josie Williams didn't just survive, she began questioning the systems that were supposed to help. In this powerful episode, Josie shares how her lived experience with homelessness exposed the structural barriers baked into public health and social service systems, and how that experience now shapes her work helping organizations move from good intentions to real, equitable action. From rebuilding trust to rethinking community engagement and grant timelines, this conversation challenges what health equity actually requires. If you care about systems change rooted in lived experience, this is a must-listen. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 1/13/26 | ![]() PHEC 439: Reimagining Public Health's Future, With Montrece McNeill Ransom, JD, MPH | In this episode, Dr. Huntley talks with Montrece McNeill Ransom, JD, MPH, about what it really means to lead in public health during a time of disruption and why this moment may be full of unexpected opportunities. From her path from law school to the CDC to her current work shaping the future public health workforce, Montrece shares powerful insights on belonging, leadership, and why law is one of public health's most underused tools. This conversation will challenge how you think about public health's past, present, and future and just might leave you feeling more hopeful (and fired up) about what comes next. Resources ▶️ Join the PHEC Community ▶️ Visit the PHEC Podcast Show Notes ▶️ DrCHHuntley, Public Health & Epidemiology Consulting | — | ||||||
| 1/9/26 | ![]() BONUS: How Community Saved Us | 2025 was one of the hardest years of my life, professionally and personally. But one decision turned everything around. In this bonus episode, I'm sharing my Word of the Year for 2026 and why it became the strategy that saved my business when everything felt like it was falling apart. If you want to know what actually works when systems fail and how to position yourself for growth in uncertain times, this episode is for you. | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.
Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.
