
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This episode of the "Mad in the Family" podcast discusses the role of human interaction in child development. Specifically, how conflict and miscommunication between parent and child is not only O.K., but crucial to a young person's social and emotional development. According to our guest, Dr. Claudia Gold, the "messiness" of our relationships is exactly what helps us build trust, resilience, and a solid sense of self in the world. That is the subject of her latest book, which she discusses with us.
Claudia Gold, M.D., is a pediatrician, infant-parent mental health specialist, author, teacher, and speaker based in western Massachusetts.
Dr. Gold practiced general and behavioral pediatrics for more than 25 years, focusing on a preventative model, and now specializes in early childhood mental health. She's also the director of The Hello It's Me Project, a rural community-based program designed to promote healthy relationships between infants and their caregivers.
In addition, she works as a clinician with FIRST Steps Together, a federally funded program for pregnant and parenting women with opioid-use disorders, and as an infant-parent mental health consultant at Volunteers in Medicine, Berkshires.
Dr. Gold serves on the faculty of the Infant-Parent Mental Health Fellowship Program at the University of Massachusetts—Boston, the Brazelton Institute at Boston Children's Hospital, and the Berkshire Psychoanalytic Institute.
She is the author of four books on child psychology and development: Keeping Your Child in Mind, The Silenced Child, The Developmental Science of Early Childhood, and most recently, The Power of Discord, written with Dr. Ed Tronick and published in June 2020.
Claudia is the author of numerous articles, including Mad in America blogs, presents regularly for audiences of both parents and professionals around the world.
By Mad in America4.6
157157 ratings
This episode of the "Mad in the Family" podcast discusses the role of human interaction in child development. Specifically, how conflict and miscommunication between parent and child is not only O.K., but crucial to a young person's social and emotional development. According to our guest, Dr. Claudia Gold, the "messiness" of our relationships is exactly what helps us build trust, resilience, and a solid sense of self in the world. That is the subject of her latest book, which she discusses with us.
Claudia Gold, M.D., is a pediatrician, infant-parent mental health specialist, author, teacher, and speaker based in western Massachusetts.
Dr. Gold practiced general and behavioral pediatrics for more than 25 years, focusing on a preventative model, and now specializes in early childhood mental health. She's also the director of The Hello It's Me Project, a rural community-based program designed to promote healthy relationships between infants and their caregivers.
In addition, she works as a clinician with FIRST Steps Together, a federally funded program for pregnant and parenting women with opioid-use disorders, and as an infant-parent mental health consultant at Volunteers in Medicine, Berkshires.
Dr. Gold serves on the faculty of the Infant-Parent Mental Health Fellowship Program at the University of Massachusetts—Boston, the Brazelton Institute at Boston Children's Hospital, and the Berkshire Psychoanalytic Institute.
She is the author of four books on child psychology and development: Keeping Your Child in Mind, The Silenced Child, The Developmental Science of Early Childhood, and most recently, The Power of Discord, written with Dr. Ed Tronick and published in June 2020.
Claudia is the author of numerous articles, including Mad in America blogs, presents regularly for audiences of both parents and professionals around the world.

10,540 Listeners

186 Listeners

1,868 Listeners

12,716 Listeners

1,395 Listeners

149 Listeners

1,348 Listeners

1,631 Listeners

545 Listeners

158 Listeners

472 Listeners

3,543 Listeners

10 Listeners

1 Listeners

124 Listeners

508 Listeners

226 Listeners

0 Listeners

2 Listeners

0 Listeners