
Why Should I Trust You? Dr. Francis Collins w MAHA Supporters & Public Health: A Conversation About Faith, Vaccines, & Trust in Experts
Dec 4, 2025
Guest
Elizabeth Frost
Guest
Emily Smith
Guest
Mackenzie (Kenzie) Isaac
Guest
Rev. Wendy Silvers
Guest
Dr. Marc Siegel
Guest
Jennifer Galardi
Guest
Jacqueline Capriotti

Guest
Francis Collins
In a thought-provoking discussion, Dr. Francis Collins, former NIH director, shares his insights on the interplay of faith and science in public health. Jacqueline Capriotti, a patient rights advocate, highlights the promise of mRNA technology for rare diseases, while Dr. Marc Siegel emphasizes the need for humility in medical practice. Rev. Wendy Silvers advocates for individual wisdom through faith, and Kenzie Isaac stresses the importance of equitable health education. The group explores how grace and empathy can help rebuild trust amid growing division in health conversations.
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Faith Stabilized As Science Trust Declines
- Pew data shows Christianity's decline leveled off and nonreligious numbers stabilized, highlighting faith's persistent role in American life.
- Simultaneously, trust in science is fracturing, creating a tension between religious identity and confidence in institutions.
Collins' Science-To-Faith Journey
- Francis Collins described discovering the cystic fibrosis gene and later leading the Human Genome Project and NIH for 12 years.
- He said science and faith coexist for him, calling the laboratory a cathedral and his faith an anchor for meaning.
Black Church Shaped A Public-Health Path
- Mackenzie Isaac shared growing up in the Black Baptist Church and how its worship sustained her through crises and informed her work in health equity.
- She linked faith's liberation ethos to her public-health commitment and raised race-related church segregation affecting health disparities.



