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Show 1436: Why Mosquitoes Bite You and How to Outsmart Them

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

Release Date: 06/27/2025

Show 1436: Why Mosquitoes Bite You and How to Outsmart Them show art Show 1436: Why Mosquitoes Bite You and How to Outsmart Them

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

In this episode, Joe & Terry speak with two scientists studying mosquito preferences. Why are some people mosquito magnets while others barely get bitten? A range of factors influences mosquito behavior and may explain why mosquitoes bite you and leave your neighbor alone. Learn how to outsmart them. Why We Worry About Mosquito Bites: You may think of mosquitoes as annoying insects with itchy bites. That’s certainly a reasonable summary in many places and times. But there are large swaths of the globe where mosquitoes carry deadly diseases. Malaria, for instance, kills an estimated...

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Show 1435: Beyond Companionship: A Veterinarian's Take on the Pet-Human Health Connection show art Show 1435: Beyond Companionship: A Veterinarian's Take on the Pet-Human Health Connection

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

This week, our guest in the studio is veterinarian Dr. Chuck Miller.  You may have already thought about One Health without realizing it has a name. This is an interdisciplinary approach to promoting the health of animals as well as humans that share an environment. If you have companion animals that move between inside and outside, your already know that protecting them from ticks and fleas also offers you a measure of protection. Another example of the importance of this approach would be control of bird flu. So far, we have paid it relatively little attention as it spread through...

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Show 1434: Digital Doctoring: Will AI Save Lives or Cause Medical Mayhem? show art Show 1434: Digital Doctoring: Will AI Save Lives or Cause Medical Mayhem?

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

In this episode, Joe & Terry speak with two physicians who have examined ways that artificial intelligence might contribute to patient care. Can AI help with better diagnoses? Is robotic surgery better? Could AI save lives or is it more likely to cause trouble? We begin our conversation with Dr. Jonathan Chen, who has found that chatting with a robot made him a better doctor. (He challenged ChatGPT with an ethically difficult conversation and was surprised at the sensitivity of the observations it offered.) When researchers studied diagnostic acumen pitting human doctors against AI, the...

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Show 1433: What Are the Hidden Dangers in the Air We Breathe? show art Show 1433: What Are the Hidden Dangers in the Air We Breathe?

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

In this episode, our guest, award-winning science journalist Carl Zimmer, describes the hidden dangers in the air we breathe. He begins with the concept of the aerobiome–the collection of living things from ground level to the stratosphere. While that includes eagles and dragonflies, the most insidious inhabitants are those we can’t see. Often, we are totally unaware of their presence. Yet bacteria like the one that causes tuberculosis or viruses like those that cause COVID or flu have the power to make us ill even if we don’t know they are there. You have surely heard of the microbiome,...

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Show 1432: Lead, Lies and Lasting Harm: The Chemical Roots of Chronic Disease show art Show 1432: Lead, Lies and Lasting Harm: The Chemical Roots of Chronic Disease

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

This week, the topic is lead. A hundred years ago, chemists discovered that adding lead to gasoline decreased engine knock and gave the cars of the day more power. It remained a popular additive for decades. At the same time, companies were adding lead to house paint to help it last longer. We know now that lead exposure harms children, but what about adults? Could lead in our environment have contributed to the horrific toll of heart disease over the past century? When the nascent automotive industry began adding tetraethyl lead to gasoline early in the 20th century, scientists did not fully...

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Show 1431: Vitamin C Studies on Colds & Cancer Vindicate Linus Pauling show art Show 1431: Vitamin C Studies on Colds & Cancer Vindicate Linus Pauling

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

This week, two scientists discuss the evidence on using vitamin C to treat colds and as part of the treatment for cancer. For years, the medical establishment has maintained that such claims could not be considered seriously. But new studies vindicate Linus Pauling, the Nobel Prize winner who postulated that vitamin C would help. In 1970 the Nobel Prize-winning chemist, Dr. Linus Pauling, published a paperback book titled Vitamin C and the Common Cold. Although this idea captured the public imagination, it got a lot of pushback from scientists. Most of the American medical establishment...

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Show 1332: What Everyone Gets Wrong About Weight Loss (Archive) show art Show 1332: What Everyone Gets Wrong About Weight Loss (Archive)

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

In this week’s episode, find out what everyone gets wrong about weight loss. Why don’t diet and exercise work very well? Do official guidelines and weight loss drugs offer a clearer path to success? With nearly three-fourths of American adults either overweight or obese, we can’t ignore the problem any longer. For decades, people have acted as though packing on extra pounds was simply a matter of poor willpower. “Eat less and exercise more” is the standard mantra. But that is just one of the things we get wrong about weight loss. In truth, obesity is far more complex than we may...

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Show 1430: Uncovering the Dark Secrets of Johnson & Johnson show art Show 1430: Uncovering the Dark Secrets of Johnson & Johnson

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

In this episode, investigative journalist Gardiner Harris delves into the dark secrets of one of the country’s most admired pharmaceutical firms. Johnson & Johnson sold talcum powder–Johnson’s Baby Powder–for decades even though it contained asbestos, an acknowledged carcinogen. How did the company maintain its superb reputation for so long? Johnson’s Baby Powder was as American as apple pie. The company counted on the emotional associations with its baby products. The fragrance of its Baby Powder was linked to feelings of love and security. That was smart marketing. Continuing...

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Show 1429: How to Love Your Liver and Protect its Superpowers show art Show 1429: How to Love Your Liver and Protect its Superpowers

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

This week, Joe and Terry discuss liver health with two specialists. You may not have spent much time thinking about your liver. It is, however, an absolutely essential organ. When the liver is working properly, every part of the body gets the nutrients it needs and no parts are exposed to damaging toxins. These are among its superpowers. Find out why you should love your liver. Nutrients don’t go directly from the intestines to the rest of the body. Instead, they pass through the liver first. There, this master organ breaks them down into compounds that can be recognized and utilized by...

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Show 1428: The Hidden Power of the Unconscious Brain show art Show 1428: The Hidden Power of the Unconscious Brain

The People's Pharmacy Podcast

Our senses feed us a tremendous amount of information all the time, but we don’t have the bandwidth to pay attention to more than a small fraction of it. That’s where the unconscious brain is so valuable, juggling millions of bits of information while we focus our conscious attention on what seems important. This week, a renowned neurosurgeon shares what he has learned in decades of working to restore ailing brains. His new book covers a vast range of neuroscience. Our dilemma was what to pay attention to in all those options. In a sense, that is always the human situation. We are capable...

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In this episode, Joe & Terry speak with two scientists studying mosquito preferences. Why are some people mosquito magnets while others barely get bitten? A range of factors influences mosquito behavior and may explain why mosquitoes bite you and leave your neighbor alone. Learn how to outsmart them.

Why We Worry About Mosquito Bites:

You may think of mosquitoes as annoying insects with itchy bites. That’s certainly a reasonable summary in many places and times. But there are large swaths of the globe where mosquitoes carry deadly diseases. Malaria, for instance, kills an estimated 600,000 people a year. The majority of these victims are children under 5 years old living in sub-Saharan Africa. Even in the US, where malaria was eradicated in the mid-20th century, mosquitoes transmit some dangerous diseases, including dengue in some southern regions, West Nile virus, and in the northeast and the Gulf Coast, eastern equine encephalitis (EEE). The best prevention for these serious infections is to outsmart mosquitoes and avoid getting bitten.

Depriving Mosquitoes of Breeding Grounds:

One problem is that a few species of mosquito have evolved to live in close proximity to humans. They have adapted to breeding in standing water, but it doesn’t take much. An upturned bottle cap, a saucer under a potted plant or leaves lying on the ground can all offer mosquito breeding opportunities. Emptying those saucers and raking away the leaves should be a priority to reduce the risk of mosquito bites.

Do You Smell Delicious?

Both our guests have been studying what makes some people more appealing than others. To that end, Dr. Conor McMeniman and his team have set up the world’s largest multiple-choice smell test for mosquitoes in Zambia. They constructed a mesh greenhouse the size of two tennis courts that could be surrounded by eight single-person tents. A person sleeps in each tent and that person’s scent is wafted into the enclosure where mosquitoes are given a chance to congregate where the preferred scent appears.

This scent buffet for mosquitoes demonstrated that microbial metabolites from our skin microbiome have a significant impact on insect behavior. Mosquitoes seem to home in on short chain carboxylic acids as well as acetoin.

How Can We Outsmart Mosquitoes?

One simple and obvious step to avoid mosquito bites is to use window screens on our homes. That helps protect us inside. Air conditioning and ceiling fans also help.

We asked Dr. McMeniman how he protects himself when he is outside and what we should do. He recommends repellents. DEET is the gold standard, but some people find it unpleasant. An effective alternative repellent is derived from plants. Whether you use oil of lemon eucalyptus or DEET, it is important to read the instructions for applying the product properly.

How Do Mosquitoes Change Their Behavior?

In addition to smell, mosquitoes also use vision and temperature sensing to find humans to bite. (Did you know mosquitoes sing to each other? It is part of their courtship behavior.) Dr. Clément Vinauger studies how mosquito brains react during different activities. They also pay attention to people who swat them and seem to avoid those individuals who come close to killing them.

Mosquitoes can also change their behavior to adapt to human behavior. For example, a species of Anopheles mosquito that was nocturnal shifted to early morning biting over a period of a few years. That happened after the human population started using effective bed nets that protected them during sleep.

More on How to Outsmart Mosquitoes:

Dr. Vinauger made a casual observation that some soaps seemed to attract mosquitoes while others repel them. In a study, he found that most of the soaps his team examined appealed to mosquitoes. On the other hand, coconut scented soap (Native brand tested) kept them away.

We asked him about Listerine. He has not studied it, nor has he studied some remedies that our listeners like such as eating garlic. However, he suggested consulting the local gardening center or nursery in selecting plantings around the home that are not attractive to mosquitoes.

This Week’s Guests:

Conor McMeniman, PhD, is Associate Professor of Molecular Microbiology & Immunology at the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute. Dr. McMeniman studies the molecular and cellular basis of mosquito attraction to humans.

In his lab, Conor McMeniman, PhD, studies why mosquitoes bite particular humans more

Conor McMeniman, PhD, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute

Clément Vinauger, PhD, is Associate Professor at Virginia Tech in the Department of Biochemistry. His research area is the molecular genetics of host-seeking behavior in insects. His website is:  https://www.vinaugerlab.com/

Dr. Clement Vinauger studies mosquito behavior

Clément Vinauger, PhD, Virginia Tech

This week’s podcast episode features bonus material from Dr. McMeniman, including exclusive content we couldn’t fit into the radio broadcast.