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

The Follow-Up: Sleep Training Evidence

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

Dr. Mona Amin

Medicine, Kids & Family, Health & Fitness, Parenting

4.91.5K Ratings

🗓️ 16 February 2026

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sleep training is one of the most emotionally charged parenting topics online, and this conversation pulls it back to what actually matters, evidence. We talk about how social media amplifies fear and confusion, why parents are told to “trust” personalities instead of data, and how looking directly at research helps cut through the noise. While opinions are loud, the body of evidence around behavioral sleep interventions is far less controversial than the internet suggests. We also walk through what the data says about timing, safety, and developmental readiness. From common myths about brain development to the fear of letting a baby cry, this episode centers on nuance. Sleep training is not all-or-nothing, not one rigid method, and not a replacement for parenting. It is a flexible set of tools families can adapt based on temperament, comfort, and goals. What we discussed: Why social media creates confusion around sleep training The importance of trusting research over personalities What the literature says about behavioral sleep interventions Why there is less scientific debate than people think Typical age ranges supported by evidence, around 4 to 6 months Developmental readiness and self-soothing ability The difference between sleep training and night weaning Why babies vary widely in temperament and sleep patterns The myth about prefrontal cortex development Why infants are capable of learning sleep skills Fear-based messaging and misuse of scientific language How parental anxiety gets amplified by misinformation Modifying sleep training methods to match family comfort Graduated extinction, parental presence, and flexible approaches The role of compromise between caregivers The core goal, helping a child fall asleep without active intervention Why sleep training does not replace responsive parenting 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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0:00.0

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0:30.0

Welcome back to the show and the series, the follow-up,

0:35.3

where we revisit a favorite episode of the show in less time than it takes your baby to have a short nap you wish was longer.

0:42.2

And clearly, y'all love talking about sleep because this episode is a top three, top three most downloaded of all time, which tells me two things.

0:51.1

One, sleep is the topic, and two, nobody is really sleeping. This conversation

0:56.3

cuts through so much of the noise you see online, the self-settling debates, wake windows,

1:00.6

regressions, the fear-based language that leaves parents more confused and exhausted than before.

1:05.5

I'm bringing back my conversation with Dr. Sujay Kansagra, a pediatric neurologist and sleep

1:10.6

medicine physician at Duke,

1:11.9

who truly knows the data and explains it in a grounded, no-drama way. You might remember him

1:17.4

from our episode on sleep training and what the evidence actually does or does not say. We talk

1:22.2

about whether genetics play a role in sleep, if there's such a thing as a good or bad sleeper,

1:26.3

whether wake windows are actually evidence-based, when babies might sleep longer stretches, and what sleep regressions

1:31.9

really are.

1:33.0

This one is a must listen if sleep content has ever made you feel behind, anxious, or like

1:38.1

you're doing something wrong.

1:39.8

And remember, if you love this conversation, download it, download the full episode, subscribe

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