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The PedsDocTalk Podcast: Child Health, Development & Parenting—From a Pediatrician Mom

The Follow-Up: Are Time Outs Bad?

The PedsDocTalk Podcast: Child Health, Development & Parenting—From a Pediatrician Mom

Dr. Mona Amin

Medicine, Kids & Family, Health & Fitness, Parenting

4.91.5K Ratings

🗓️ 2 March 2026

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Timeouts have become one of the most misunderstood discipline tools in modern parenting conversations. In this episode, we unpack why timeouts are being labeled as harmful online and how that claim does not match decades of research. The real issue is not that timeouts damage attachment, but that many parents were never taught how to use them correctly. When done properly, a timeout is not punishment or shame. It is a structured pause that helps a child and parent calm down so learning can actually happen. We also talk about discipline as a layered system, not a single tactic. Timeouts are only one small part of a bigger parenting framework built on connection, attention, praise, and natural consequences. The conversation highlights nuance, temperament differences, and why no single method works for every child. Instead of vilifying tools, we focus on using them thoughtfully, consistently, and in ways that support regulation and growth. What we discussed: Why timeouts are being criticized in gentle parenting spaces Claims about attachment damage and trauma, and what research actually shows The difference between punitive timeouts and regulatory timeouts Why most parents are never taught how to use timeouts correctly Discipline as teaching, not shaming The discipline pyramid and where timeouts fit The foundation of connection and one-on-one attention Catching positive behavior with praise and rewards Using natural and logical consequences Why timeouts are a last-tier tool, not a first response Temperament differences and individualized discipline Neurodivergent children and why some tools matter more Evidence-based parenting programs that include timeouts Situations where timeouts are appropriate, like safety concerns Situations where timeouts are not helpful, like full meltdown tantrums The importance of calming the nervous system before teaching Avoiding threats, shame, and over-talking during discipline Giving children space when they need separation to regulate Why parenting tools should expand, not shrink Want more? Listen to the full, original episode. 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

Transcript

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0:29.7

Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mona, and this is the follow-up,

0:35.4

where we revisit a favorite podcast moment on the Pete's Doc Talk podcast and less time than it takes your child to calm their body after being told no.

0:44.6

Today's clip is from a conversation that sparked a lot of discussion in the parenting world.

0:48.5

Time outs.

0:49.7

They get a bad rap online, but when used correctly, they can be one tool in a larger discipline

0:56.0

approach. Now, it is not my first choice for discipline, but it is an option. And what I've

1:00.6

noticed is that so many parents do it incorrectly. And that is why it's not effective. I'm

1:06.0

joined by Dr. Jenica Engler, developmental neuropsychologist, clinical scientists, and mom, we talk about

1:11.3

why timeouts are so controversial when they actually can help, when not to use them, and how

1:16.7

parents often misuse them. I'm re-releasing this episode because it continues to resonate with families,

1:22.1

and honestly, because I'm in the middle of writing my first book where I'm digging into some

1:26.6

of the most debated, yes, parenting strategies.

1:30.5

And timeouts are definitely one of them.

1:32.7

Stay tuned for more on that and make sure you're on my newsletter list through the

1:36.4

link in bio so you don't miss what's coming next on Pete Stock Talk.

1:39.5

If this episode helps you, download it, download the full episode. Follow and subscribe to the show

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