The PedsDocTalk Podcast: Child Health, Development & Parenting—From a Pediatrician Mom
Dr. Mona Amin
325 episodes
1 day ago
The PedsDocTalk Podcast is your go-to parenting resource, hosted by Dr. Mona Amin, a trusted pediatrician, parenting expert, and mom of two. As a top 50 Parenting Podcast in the U.S., this show delivers expert-backed guidance on child development, health, illness, behavior, feeding, and sleep—giving parents the confidence to navigate every stage from baby to teen.
Each episode dives into real-life parenting challenges, featuring conversations with specialists in pediatrics, child psychology, nutrition, and parental well-being. From potty training and sleep training to tackling tantrums, picky eating, discipline, screen time, postpartum recovery, and developmental milestones, Dr. Mona provides practical, science-backed advice that actually works.
Tune in on Mondays and Wednesdays for actionable insights, mindset shifts, and expert interviews that empower you to raise healthy, resilient, and happy kids—while thriving as a parent yourself!
All content for The PedsDocTalk Podcast: Child Health, Development & Parenting—From a Pediatrician Mom is the property of Dr. Mona Amin and is served directly from their servers
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The PedsDocTalk Podcast is your go-to parenting resource, hosted by Dr. Mona Amin, a trusted pediatrician, parenting expert, and mom of two. As a top 50 Parenting Podcast in the U.S., this show delivers expert-backed guidance on child development, health, illness, behavior, feeding, and sleep—giving parents the confidence to navigate every stage from baby to teen.
Each episode dives into real-life parenting challenges, featuring conversations with specialists in pediatrics, child psychology, nutrition, and parental well-being. From potty training and sleep training to tackling tantrums, picky eating, discipline, screen time, postpartum recovery, and developmental milestones, Dr. Mona provides practical, science-backed advice that actually works.
Tune in on Mondays and Wednesdays for actionable insights, mindset shifts, and expert interviews that empower you to raise healthy, resilient, and happy kids—while thriving as a parent yourself!
There’s a lot of pressure to breastfeed but not nearly enough conversation about what to do when it doesn’t go as planned.
In this honest and compassionate episode, Dr. Mona sits down with lactation counselor and mom of two Kaia Lacey to talk about low milk supply, combo feeding, and the emotional weight of unrealistic feeding expectations. Whether you’ve struggled with supply, felt shamed for using formula, or wondered if you're the only one doing “a little of both,” this one’s for you.
They cover:
The difference between primary and secondary low milk supply
What IGT (insufficient glandular tissue) is and how it’s often missed
Why combo feeding isn’t a failure—it’s a valid, supported choice
How internalized “breast is best” messages can lead to shame and burnout
What parents really need: support, diagnosis, and honest information
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever paused at a vaccine insert, googled an ingredient, or felt torn between fear and science?
Dr. Elisabeth Marnik (@sciencewhizliz) wasn’t vaccinated as a child. She grew up in an anti-vax household—but today, she’s a scientist, professor, and mom who vaccinates her own children and helps others feel informed, not fearful.
🧬 In this episode, we talk about what changed her mind—and how we move the conversation on vaccines away from shaming and toward shared values like protecting our kids.
We cover:
What it was like growing up unvaccinated and how becoming a mom changed her entire perspective
How mistrust in larger systems (schools, government, healthcare) fuels vaccine resistance
What people often get wrong about vaccine hesitancy—and why yelling never changes minds
The difference between being anti-vax and vaccine-hesitant—and why reducing it to a binary doesn’t help anyone
Her powerful quote: “The reason my mom didn’t vaccinate is the same reason I chose to vaccinate—because I want to protect my kids.”
How science communicators can do a better job at discussing vaccines
This conversation was inspired by one of her Substack pieces: 📖 Read it here
To connect with Dr. Liz Marnik follow her on Instagram @sciencewhizliz, check out all her resources at https://open.substack.com/pub/fromthescienceclass and https://www.elisabethmarnikphd.com/.
Check out the PedsDocTalk Vaccine Guide: https://pedsdoctalk.com/vaccine-guide/
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
0:00 – Understanding the Roots of Vaccine Hesitancy
3:09 – Fear vs. Mistrust: What’s Really Going On?
6:27 – How Systemic Bias Shapes Medical Trust
9:30 – The Problem with the “Just Trust Us” Approach
12:37 – Too Much Information Can Backfire
15:35 – Common Parent Fears About Vaccines
18:45 – Conversations That Actually Shift Perspective
21:42 – Validating Without Agreeing
24:57 – When Curiosity Builds More Trust Than Convincing
28:00 – Small Wins That Add Up
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In honor of National Immunization Awareness Month, Dr. Mona brings back one of her most important conversations—this time with fellow pediatrician and vaccine advocate, Dr. Nicole Baldwin.
Together, they break down:
Why they vaccinate their own kids
What parents misunderstand about vaccine risks
The real stories of vaccine-preventable illnesses they’ll never forget
Why pediatricians aren’t “trained for half a day on vaccines” (and other wild myths that won’t die)
What families need to know to make informed, confident choices
This episode gets personal, practical, and powerful because in a world full of misinformation, hearing directly from two doctors who live this every day can make all the difference.
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think your pediatrician has all the breastfeeding answers? The truth is, most don’t and that’s not a knock on them. It’s a reflection of the limited lactation training in pediatric residency.
That’s why I sat down with Dr. Lauren Hughes, founder of Bloom Pediatrics and a double threat: pediatrician and IBCLC. Together, we unpack the myths, the mental load, and the real deal about breastfeeding support that parents deserve but don’t always get in those early days.
We talk about:
Why pediatricians often give confusing (or just plain wrong) advice around lactation
How the term “nipple confusion” creates shame instead of support and what’s really going on with flow preference
How pumping, pacifiers, and supplementation can all fit into a successful feeding planWhy protecting a parent’s mental health is just as important as protecting their milk supply
To connect with Dr. Lauren Hughes follow her on Instagram @bloomdcp and check out all her resources at https://www.drlaurenhughes.com/
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – Intro
03:08 – Meet Dr. Lauren: Pediatrician and IBCLC
05:29 – Breastfeeding Training Gaps in Pediatrics
07:57 – What Parents Deserve in Feeding Support
10:20 – How DPC Supports Better Lactation Care
12:11 – Why Pediatricians Should Also Be IBCLCs
14:23 – The Pacifier Panic: When to Introduce It
17:13 – Formula Stigma and Feeding Shame
20:11 – Healing from Birth and Feeding Trauma
22:30 – “Science Milk”: Reframing Formula
24:12 – How to Talk About Pacifiers (Without Judging Moms)
26:25 – Exclusive Pumping is Still Breastfeeding
27:58 – The Role of Policy in Feeding Goals
29:11 – Supplementing Wisely: When and How
31:15 – Pumped Milk vs. Formula: Stop the Math Game
33:18 – Babies Aren’t Robots
35:15 – The Problem with Overtracking Feeds
36:05 – Protecting Supply: What Pediatricians Miss
37:11 – Triple Feeding: What Actually Helps
40:33 – The Sleep Trap: Prioritizing Baby Sleep Over Supply
41:08 – Realistic Overnight Routines for Pumping Parents
42:54 – Twin Feeding Realities + Supply Building
43:34 – Time Limits at the Breast: Who Are They For?
45:46 – One Last Myth: Formula Before Bed = Better Sleep?
47:19 – Final Words: Your Worth Isn’t Measured in Ounces
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Triple feeding (nursing, pumping, and supplementing) might sound like a solid plan on paper. But for many parents, it turns into a nonstop cycle that’s physically draining, mentally exhausting, and emotionally overwhelming.
In this Follow-Up episode, Dr. Mona talks with lactation consultant and author Victoria Facelli about why triple feeding is often recommended, why it’s not always sustainable, and what we should be doing instead.
They discuss:
The real reason triple feeding gets suggested so often (even by well-meaning pediatricians and lactation consultants)
Why it can feel like torture and rob families of sleep, sanity, and bonding
How to protect both milk supply and mental health
What responsive feeding really looks like—and why connection matters more than perfection
This episode originally aired in honor of World Breastfeeding Week, and it’s here to remind you: feeding your baby shouldn’t mean losing yourself.
Check out Victoria's book (now available in paperback) Feed the Baby: https://www.amazon.com/Feed-Baby-Inclusive-Bottle-Feeding-Everything/dp/1682689662/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Conflicted about your child using screens in school? From iPads in kindergarten or digital homework apps in middle school we’ll cover how to balance the reality of tech with what your child truly needs developmentally.
I’m joined by Emily Cherkin, M.Ed., former teacher, author, and “The Screen Time Consultant,” who’s leading the charge on tech-intentional parenting and education. Together, we unpack how screens in schools have gone from occasional tools to everyday defaults and why that shift might be hurting our kids more than helping them.
We talk about:
How the pandemic accelerated a trend that was already in motion: more tech, younger kids, fewer real-life skills
What we’re giving up when screen-based learning replaces play, paper, and people
The difference between being anti-tech and tech intentional and how to advocate for your child without feeling adversarial
To learn your rights about opting out check out https://edtech.law/
To connect with Emily Cherkin follow her on Instagram @thescreentimeconsultant, check out all her resources including her newsletter at https://thescreentimeconsultant.com/. Emily also offers free monthly webinars: https://thescreentimeconsultant.com/events
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – From No Phones to Full Screens: A Teacher’s Wake-Up Call
01:09 – When iPads Replaced Pencils in Kindergarten
03:13 – Meet Emily: Educator, Parent, Screen Time Consultant
06:28 – Skills Before Screens: Why Development Comes First
07:52 – Big Tech in a Sweater Vest? Yep, That’s EdTech
09:15 – Kids Know How to Copy-Paste, But Not Type
10:34 – Safety & Inappropriate Access in Schools
11:06 – Pre-Screen Childhoods vs. Today’s Reality
12:08 – Is All This Tech Really Necessary in Schools?
14:09 – If It’s So Great, Why Don’t Tech Execs Use It?
15:15 – Learning Takes Struggle, Not Just Speed
17:15 – Libraries, Labs, and What We’ve Lost
18:29 – Kids’ Data for Sale? Yes, Even in School Apps
19:15 – Turning Down Big Tech as a Pediatrician
21:13 – Less is More, Later is Better
23:58 – Bring Back the Computer Lab
26:25 – Opting Out: The Power of One (Fish)
29:18 – Parenting with Intention in a Screen World
33:02 – Why Asking for Paper is “Revolutionary” Now
35:01 – Home Habits that Protect Kids
38:24 – Final Takeaway: You’re Not Alone
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Most parents think picky eating starts in toddlerhood. But according to Jenny Best, founder of Solid Starts, the roots go much deeper and earlier.
In this Follow-Up episode, Jenny and I dig into the real reasons picky eating happens, what behaviors unknowingly contribute to it, and why feeding is so much more than just offering food. It’s emotional. It’s behavioral. It’s developmental. And yes—it’s totally fixable.
Together they discuss:
Why gagging isn’t always a red flag (and how it helps build skills)
The science behind chewing and why purees don’t teach it
How spoon-feeding past a certain age can delay oral development
Why how we feed is just as important as what we feed
The sneaky role anxiety and pressure play at mealtimes
What Jenny wishes more pediatricians (and parents) understood
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Do you know what a bone age is? If you’ve ever found yourself spiraling over early puberty headlines or wondering if plastic cups and lavender lotion are harming your child’s hormones this episode is for you.
I’m joined by Dr. Sarah Hart Unger, a pediatric endocrinologist, mom of three, and co-host of the Best of Both Worlds and Best Laid Plans podcasts. Together, we cut through the confusion and misinformation around early puberty, endocrine disruptors, and what’s actually backed by science.
We dive into:
What early puberty actually looks like including what’s normal vs. concerning, the difference between true puberty and adrenal changes, and when to seek evaluation.
Real vs. rumored causes like the roles of body fat, genetics, and endocrine disruptors like BPA and lavender without spiraling into fear or guilt.
When medical treatment is needed, when reassurance is enough, and why chasing puberty “delays” can sometimes do more harm than good.
To connect with Sarah Hart-Unger check out all her resources at https://linktr.ee/the_shubox
And enjoy our previous episode: https://pedsdoctalk.com/podcast/i-wish-my-kid-was-a-little-bit-taller-height-and-kids/
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – Intro: Why earlier puberty headlines are everywhere
01:45 – Meet Dr. Sarah Hart-Unger: Pediatric endocrinologist and mom
04:30 – What is actually considered early puberty?
06:10 – The rise in early puberty: Is it real or just more noticed?
08:00 – Are endocrine disruptors to blame?
10:45 – The role of stress, trauma, and environment
13:10 – What “normal” puberty looks like across ages and genders
15:40 – Should you be worried about lavender lotion and plastic cups?
18:30 – What parents Google vs. what pediatricians actually test for
21:00 – What’s a bone age scan, and when is it helpful?
23:00 – When to worry: True red flags for early puberty
25:40 – The problem with over-testing and over-fearing
28:10 – Why Dr. Hart-Unger prioritizes calm, not panic
30:00 – Navigating puberty in boys vs. girls
32:45 – Language for talking about puberty without shame
35:00 – Helping your child feel confident in a changing body
37:10 – Final thoughts and what Dr. Hart-Unger wants parents to remember
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If the phrase “kindergarten readiness” sends you into a spiral of flashcards and phonics drills, this one’s for you.
In this follow-up episode, I chat with Susie Allison (@busytoddler), former kindergarten teacher and mom of three, to reframe how we think about school prep. Spoiler: it’s not about who can write their name in cursive or recite the alphabet backwards.
We talk about:
Why academic checklists miss the bigger picture
The real skills that help kids thrive in school (like asking for help and taking turns)
Why earlier isn’t always better when it comes to reading
How to raise kind, confident kids without burning yourself out trying to be their full-time teacher
Whether your child is starting kindergarten soon or you’re just feeling the pressure to “keep up,” this episode is your permission slip to focus on what actually matters.
🎧 Download, follow, and share this episode with a friend who needs the reminder.
📌 Want the full episode? Head to pedsdoctalk.com for more!
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you’ve ever felt confused, judged, or overwhelmed by how weight is discussed at your child’s doctor’s visits? Whether your child is in a larger body, a smaller body, or somewhere in between this episode is for anyone who wants to raise healthy kids without harmful messaging.
I’m joined by Dr. Tommy Martin, a physician, educator, and passionate advocate for reframing weight and health conversations with compassion and clarity. Together, we explore why BMI was never meant to guide pediatric care, how weight bias shows up in medical settings, and what parents can do to protect their child’s body confidence without ignoring health.
We dive into:
Why BMI was never meant for individual kids and how outdated growth charts still shape care today
The lasting harm of weight bias in healthcare, from missed diagnoses to internalized shame as early as age 3
How to reframe conversations around health without numbers or labels and practical ways to advocate for your child
To connect with Dr. Tommy Martin follow him on Instagram @dr.tommymartin, check out all his resources at https://link.me/dr.tommymartin
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – Intro: Why weight conversations in pediatrics matter
02:10 – Meet Dr. Tommy Martin and his backstory
04:50 – Growing up in a larger body and the roots of weight stigma
06:45 – Subtle messages kids absorb at the doctor’s office
09:00 – Hurtful comments from family, peers, and culture
13:45 – Dr. Mona’s story: Smaller body, different pressure
15:30 – The impossible standards of body image
17:00 – Why pediatricians weigh kids and how Dr. Mona reframes it
18:30 – Dr. Tommy’s patient-first approach to weight discussions
21:45 – What BMI gets wrong (and how it still shows up)
25:20 – The harm of casual body comments
27:00 – Genetics, hormones, and the science of food noise
30:00 – The stigma and science behind GLP-1 medications
33:00 – How Dr. Mona talks to families about elevated labs without shame
40:00 – Why she never sets weight goals for kids
43:00 – Helping kids fuel for function, not aesthetics
46:00 – Modeling healthy habits in everyday life
48:00 – Weight bias in healthcare and missed diagnoses
50:00 – Long-term harm of labels like “obese” or “underweight”
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Five and a half years ago, I became a mother.
But the day my son was born wasn’t the best day of my life... it was the worst.
In this deeply personal Follow-Up episode, I revisit the story that changed everything for me: my traumatic birth experience with my son Ryaan, the complications that followed, and how it impacted me as a mother, a pediatrician, and a human.
Whether your birth went sideways slowly or spiraled in an instant—this episode is for you.
I share:
The moment I knew something was wrong
What I experienced during 13 painful days in the hospital
How trauma shaped my identity, my anxiety, and my approach to parenting
The invisible grief many parents carry
Why birth trauma deserves to be seen, supported, and spoken about
If you’ve ever felt like your story didn’t “count” because you survived… this one is for you.
💛 You are not alone. Your story matters. And healing is possible.
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you’ve ever assumed that being near your child at the pool meant they were safe, this episode might just change the way you see water forever.
I’m joined by Lindsay Mondick, Director of Aquatic Safety for the YMCA of the USA and a lifelong advocate for drowning prevention. We talk about what drowning really looks like (spoiler: it’s not like the movies), why so many tragic incidents happen with adults present, and how something as simple as putting your phone down can be the difference between life and death.
She joins me to discuss: • Why drowning is quick, silent, and often missed even with supervision nearby • The “Phones Down, Eyes Up” campaign and what every caregiver needs to know • How to build layers of water safety from swim lessons to life jackets to water watchers
Whether you’re a pool regular, weekend beachgoer, or backyard splash pad fan—this conversation is a must-listen for every parent this summer.
To connect with the YMCA follow them on Instagram @ymca; TikTok @ymcaofficiall; Facebook @TheY and YouTube @ymca. Learn more at Phonesdowneyesup.org
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – 01:18 Why This Conversation Matters
01:19 – 02:37 Meet Lindsay: A Lifelong Water Safety Advocate
02:38 – 04:35 The Pandemic’s Impact on Drowning Risk
04:36 – 06:14 Why Proximity Isn’t Enough
06:15 – 08:32 Active Supervision: What It Looks Like
08:33 – 10:16 Are Lifeguards Enough?
10:17 – 12:14 Strong Swimmers Still Need Supervision
12:15 – 13:41 The Hidden Dangers of Lakes and Open Water
13:42 – 15:53 What Drowning Really Looks Like
15:54 – 19:55 The Power of Prevention and Real-Life Stories
19:56 – 22:31 Swim Lessons: How Early Is Too Early?
22:32 – 27:14 Teaching Adults to Swim (And Why It Matters)
27:15 – 30:07 Bridging the Gap in Underserved Communities
30:08 – 32:04 One Simple Habit That Can Save a Life
32:05 – 36:15 Minimizing Distraction Without Guilt
36:16 – 39:10 Final Thoughts + Taking Action
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You’ve probably seen it—your toddler pretending to cook after watching you in the kitchen, or mimicking your sighs after a long day. It’s not just cute—it’s neuroscience. In this powerful follow-up episode, Dr. Mona sits down with educator Chris Lake to unpack mirror neurons, the brain’s fascinating mechanism for learning through observation.
Together, they explore how these neurons shape everything from crawling and speech to empathy and emotional regulation—and how everyday moments of modeling can support your child’s development more than any app ever could.
Whether you’re wondering how screen time affects speech, why your toddler copies your every move, or how to introduce new toys and skills more effectively, this conversation offers both science and simple strategies for parents to put into practice.
What You’ll Learn:
The surprising research behind mirror neurons and observational learning
Why our kids learn best through watching (not just being told)
How mouth-gazing helps with speech development—and why screens fall short
Why modeling behaviors like sharing and play matters more than we think
The link between demonstration, confidence, and child mastery
The truth about screen time’s impact on social and language skills
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you’ve ever felt dismissed, overwhelmed, or unsure about your baby’s feeding challenges, this conversation is a validating, eye-opening listen.
I’m joined by Mallory Roberts, a licensed speech-language pathologist, infant feeding specialist, and craniosacral therapist. We dive into the misunderstood world of infant reflux including what’s really going on beneath the surface, why “they’ll outgrow it” isn’t always the full story, and how a holistic, body-based approach can change everything about how a baby feeds, feels, and thrives.
She joins me to discuss:
Why reflux is often misunderstood and why medication shouldn’t always be the first step
How feeding position, parental stress, and early body tension play a major role in symptoms
What craniosacral therapy is, and how gentle, connection-based care can transform feeding struggles
To connect with Mallory Roberts follow her on Instagram @thefeedingmom.method, check out all her resources at https://www.thefeedingmom.com/
00:00 – Intro
02:06 – What Is Craniosacral Therapy?
03:01 – Meet Mallory Roberts
07:45 – What’s Missing in Traditional Reflux Care
10:08 – Feeding Position Matters
12:14 – A Holistic Reflux Plan
17:47 – Red Flags for Reflux
23:10 – What Happens in a Craniosacral Session
28:00 – The Parent’s Energy Matters
33:13 – Where She Places Her Hands (and Why)
37:11 – How to Find a Therapist (or Learn Yourself)
41:23 – Final Encouragement for Parents
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What’s the real difference between ISR (Infant Swimming Resource) and traditional swim lessons and is one really safer?
In this episode, I sit down with a certified ISR instructor to break down what ISR actually is, how it works, and why it’s not the “throw-your-baby-in-the-pool” method people assume it is. With drowning being the leading cause of accidental death in kids ages 1–4, this conversation is a must-listen for any parent near water.
We cover:
The history and science behind ISR
How ISR teaches self-rescue and survival skills
How it compares to traditional swim classes (including one-on-one lessons)
Why lessons are just 10 minutes a day and why that works
Common misconceptions: trauma, tears, and floating myths
What to look for in a swim instructor
When babies and toddlers can safely start ISR
Whether you’re a pool owner, beach-goer, or just a parent exploring water safety, this episode will help you make informed decisions and feel more confident in protecting your child around water.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
“They’ll eat if they’re hungry.” This CAN be true for many kids when it comes to feeding and picky eating, but for some kids it’s not great advise. I welcome Dr. Taylor Arnold, a PhD, registered dietician, and founder Growing Intuitive Eaters and she is on a mission to foster a healthy relationship with food and teach adults how to talk to kids about food in a positive way.
She joins me to discuss:
Why this advice can lack a lot of nuance
When to know or be concerned your child may have an underlying issue regarding feeding solids
Why online guidance around feeding sometimes lacks necessary nuance
To connect with Dr. Taylor Arnold follow her on Instagram @growing.intuitive.eaters, check out all her resources at https://msha.ke/growingintuitiveeaters
00:00 – Intro
01:29 – Meet Dr. Taylor Arnold
03:45 – Let’s Break It Down: Why That Phrase Fails Some Kids
06:09 – Medical and Sensory Red Flags to Watch For
08:11 – So What Should Parents Do Instead?
10:56 – Red Flags That Signal It’s Time to Act
13:32 – A Pediatrician and Parent’s Perspective on Feeling Brushed Off
15:05 – Feeding, Sleep, and Behavior: The Pediatric Trifecta
15:58 – A Final Feeding Pet Peeve: School Nutrition Assignments
20:03 – Final Takeaway: If You’re Not Being Heard, Get Louder
21:54 – Where to Find Dr. Taylor Arnold’s Free Resources
22:55 – Dr. Mona’s Closing Reflections
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This episode is personal.
My husband and I sit down for an open, honest, and vulnerable conversation about what it means to reparent ourselves while raising our son. It’s a raw look at how childhood experiences—good and bad—shape us as adults, and how we can consciously break harmful cycles for the next generation.
In this conversation, we explore:
✨ What “reparenting” really means—and why it’s not about blame, but awareness and healing
😡 How anger, yelling, and emotional reactivity from childhood show up in our parenting—and what we’re doing to change it
🧠 The long-lasting impact of body image comments, even when they seem “harmless”
📊 Navigating comparison, perfectionism, and pressure—especially in achievement-focused households
❤️ The power of modeling emotional regulation, self-acceptance, and growth mindset for our son
🔄 How we still slip up—and how accountability and grace keep us moving forward
This episode is for any parent who’s looked in the mirror (or at their child) and thought: I want to do things differently.
It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being conscious. It's about healing. And it’s about choosing a more connected, compassionate way to parent—starting with ourselves.
🎧 Listen in, reflect with us, and share with someone who's breaking cycles too.
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever felt like you’re running on fumes, snapping at your kids, or just going through the motions of parenting with no joy left in the tank? You’re not broken. You’re burned out.
In this episode, Dr. Flora Sinha joins me to break down what parenting burnout really is from a psychological and physiological perspective and why it’s so common (especially for moms). More importantly, she shares actionable, research-backed strategies to help you move from survival mode to a place of more clarity, connection, and peace.
We discuss:
The difference between normal exhaustion and true burnout
What’s not helping (looking at you, hustle culture)
How to find small but powerful pockets of recovery in real life
Mindset shifts and scripts to release the guilt and reclaim your joy
If you would like to listen to Dr Flora's the Beyond podcast series, receive her free newsletters, sign up for her REwritten coaching program, you can do all of that here: https://linktr.ee/florasinhamd
Follow Dr. Flora on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/drflorasinha/
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 Intro
03:03 Personal Stories + Signs to Watch For
08:20 Burnout, Depression, and the Guilt Spiral
14:23 The Pressure to Do It All
22:48 Micro Breaks, Macro Relief
29:41 Boundaries, Self-Talk, and Asking for Help
36:01 Starting Small + Next Steps
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Returning to work while breastfeeding? You’re not alone—and you don’t have to figure it out on your own either.
In this episode, we break down the essentials of pumping and transitioning back to work with your feeding goals intact. Whether you're just starting to think about pumping or already mapping out a return-to-work plan, this episode covers what you need to know to make it work at work—with less stress and more support.
We discuss:
🍼 Your legal rights to pump at work (hint: it’s not an “accommodation”)
🧾 What to talk to your employer and HR about before returning
👜 A practical packing + pumping checklist for the workday
🕒 How much time to block off (spoiler: 30-minute breaks are ideal!)
🧊 Storage, cleaning, and coolers—figuring out logistics for any job site
💡 When and how to start pumping before you return to work
💞 Tips for building a freezer stash without spiraling into oversupply
🧠 Encouragement for the emotional side—because this transition is a lot
Most importantly? We bust the myth that it’s “all or nothing.” If you need to supplement with formula, that’s okay—and you can absolutely still nurse at home and pump what you can. Flexibility is not failure.
Whether you're planning ahead or feeling overwhelmed, this episode will leave you feeling seen, supported, and equipped for the next step in your breastfeeding journey.
🎧 Tune in and share with another working parent who needs this pep talk!
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is parenting starting to feel like one giant checklist you’re constantly failing?
In this episode, I introduce a powerful mindset shift called Zoom Out Parenting, a way to ditch the guilt, the hyper-tracking, and the unrealistic expectations that make modern parenting feel overwhelming. From picky eating to screen time guilt, wake windows to milestone anxiety, I explore why we spiral into perfectionism and how to step back and focus on what actually matters.
You’ll learn:
What Zoom Out Parenting really means
Why zooming in too closely fuels guilt and anxiety
Real-life examples of how to reframe everyday parenting struggles
The one question that can stop a parenting spiral in its track
We’d like to know who is listening! Please fill out our Listener Survey to help us improve the show and learn about you!
00:00 – Welcome & Episode Intro
01:05 – Why We Need to Zoom Out
02:18 – What Zooming Out Really Means
03:06 – When Tracking Becomes Hypervigilance
04:04 – Guilt, Control, and Letting Go
05:05 – Zoom In vs. Zoom Out: Real Parenting Examples
08:03 – Development Is a Landscape, Not a Checklist
09:20 – The Cost of Always Zooming In
09:56 – Tips to Reframe in Real Time
10:39 – Zooming Out Isn’t Denial—It’s Clarity
11:03 – Intentional Parenting Over Perfect Parenting
11:43 – Final Thoughts & Takeaway
Our podcasts are also now on YouTube. If you prefer a video podcast with closed captioning, check us out there and subscribe to PedsDocTalk.
Get trusted pediatric advice, relatable parenting insights, and evidence-based tips delivered straight to your inbox—join thousands of parents who rely on the PDT newsletter to stay informed, supported, and confident. Join the newsletter!
And don’t forget to follow @pedsdoctalkpodcast on Instagram—our new space just for parents looking for real talk and real support.
We love the sponsors that make this show possible! You can always find all the special deals and codes for all our current sponsors on the PedsDocTalk Podcast Sponsorships page of the website.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The PedsDocTalk Podcast: Child Health, Development & Parenting—From a Pediatrician Mom
The PedsDocTalk Podcast is your go-to parenting resource, hosted by Dr. Mona Amin, a trusted pediatrician, parenting expert, and mom of two. As a top 50 Parenting Podcast in the U.S., this show delivers expert-backed guidance on child development, health, illness, behavior, feeding, and sleep—giving parents the confidence to navigate every stage from baby to teen.
Each episode dives into real-life parenting challenges, featuring conversations with specialists in pediatrics, child psychology, nutrition, and parental well-being. From potty training and sleep training to tackling tantrums, picky eating, discipline, screen time, postpartum recovery, and developmental milestones, Dr. Mona provides practical, science-backed advice that actually works.
Tune in on Mondays and Wednesdays for actionable insights, mindset shifts, and expert interviews that empower you to raise healthy, resilient, and happy kids—while thriving as a parent yourself!