The PFAS Chronicles

The Science of PFAS Detection

27 min · 26. sept. 2025
episode The Science of PFAS Detection cover

Description

Hosts Anchal Malh and Natalie Conti are back for another educational episode on PFAS. This time, they investigate how PFAS are studied and monitored. In this conversation with Dr. Katherine Manz, Assistant Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, they begin to explore how PFAS contaminate water and soil with implications for environmental health and justice. Tune in to explore how the human body responds to PFAS exposure.

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5 episodes

episode Halting the PFAS Cycle and Its Costs on People, Communities, and Society artwork

Halting the PFAS Cycle and Its Costs on People, Communities, and Society

In this final episode, hosts Anchal Malh and Natalie Conti wrap up their conversation on PFAS in the environment with Kristin Mello and Christopher Clark of Westfield Residents Advocating for Themselves (WRAFT). They discuss the ways research, policies, and technology have been implemented to reduce PFAS exposures and their limitations.  They also remind us about environmental justice issues related to PFAS, highlighting the work of current advocacy groups. Listeners are left with key takeaways on what the field of environmental health—and all of society—can learn from PFAS. Finally, there is a call-to-action: How can we ensure marginalized communities, particularly communities of color and low-wealth communities, are not experiencing disproportionate impacts from PFAS? Tune in for this concluding episode of The PFAS Chronicles.

26. sept. 202526 min