

Reach Out and Read
Reach Out and Read
From the national organization Reach Out and Read comes a brand new podcast centered around the belief that children's books build better brains, better family relationships, and happier, healthy children and societies. Join us as host Dr Dipesh Navsaria, a pediatrician with a children's librarianship degree, dives into a wealth of varied early childhood health and literacy topics with expert guests examining the many facets of supporting the parent-child relationship as key to early success.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 19, 2026 • 34min
The Civil Rights Story You've Never Heard Of
We're always surprised — and a little chagrined — to find a piece of history we had not yet heard about. Author Maria Dolores Aguila joins us to talk about her new book A Sea of Lemon Trees: The Corrido of Roberto Alvarez, a uniquely American story about one child's stand against poverty, deportation, racism, and colorism in southern California in the early 1900s.

Mar 5, 2026 • 35min
Do Audiobooks Count as Reading?
For a question that brings up strong feelings on both sides, try asking: Do audiobooks qualify as 'reading'? Brian Bannon, the Merryl and James Tisch Director of Branch Libraries and Education and Chief Librarian at The New York Public Library, joins us to talk about the rise of—and stigma around—audiobooks, and why the environment in which we read might matter more than the modality.

Feb 19, 2026 • 35min
Stress, Trauma, and Children's Minds
We know that stress and trauma uniquely affects children. But we also know that intervening early can help reduce the associated adverse health outcomes — and that a strong caregiver/child relationship is especially powerful at buffering the effects of stress. Dr. Heather Forkey, professor of pediatrics and the vice chair of pediatrics at UMass Chan Medical School and division director of the Foster Children Evaluation Service at UMass Memorial Children's Medical Center joins us to help us understand what trauma and stress does to children and how we can help address it.

Feb 5, 2026 • 35min
The New AAP Digital Media Guidance
A child's engagement with digital media isn't just with a device or an app, but with an entire digital ecosystem. Managing these ecosystems can be challenging enough under regular circumstances, but tech's commercialization has outpaced families' access to helpful supports around health development, relationships, and well-being — not just of individual children or families, but of communities and societies. Dr. Tiffany Munzer, a lead author of the AAP's new Digital Ecosystems, Children, and Adolescents Policy Statement, joins us to explain this new publication and its recommendations for families, caregivers, society — and industry.

Jan 22, 2026 • 33min
Sadie Stein on The Saddest Story Ever Told
Stories with a hefty emotional punch often stick with us — and when it comes to timeless stories (think fairy tales) — that punch is often rooted in some pretty dark feelings. Exploring Hans Christian Anderson's famous tale "The Little Match Girl", Sadie Stein, an editor at the New York Times Book Review, joins us to talk about how parents and caregivers can help children navigate challenging emotions through books.

Jan 8, 2026 • 32min
How Do You Choose 'Essential' Children's Books?
A few months ago, our host, Dr. Dipesh Navsaria, was one of several experts asked by The Atlantic magazine to share nominations for "best picture books for children", from the past 100 years. Dr. Navsaria and guest Emma Sarappo, a senior editor at The Atlantic, break down the process, which books made their list, and why.

Dec 23, 2025 • 32min
The Secret Languages of Families
Language shapes all aspects of our lives, including how we connect with our family. Often, the more "insider" that language is, the stronger the family bonds are. Cynthia Gordon, a professor in the linguistics department at Georgetown University and the author of "Making Meanings, Creating Family", joins us to talk about "familect" — a unique dialect particular to each and every family — and why it matters.

Dec 11, 2025 • 43min
Voices from the 2025 National Summit
In early November 2025, nearly 300 people from the Reach Out and Read and Nurture Connection worlds — comprising clinicians, staff, community leaders, funders, and parents — gathered in Washington, DC for the National Summit. This event convened a coalition of innovative organizations representing the nation's early childhood community, child health systems, and networks of public and private investments to share progress, ideas, hopes, and dreams. Voices heard in this episode include: 00:00: Mark Del Monte 02:06: Dr. Lynette Fraga 07:11: Dr. Robert Needleman 07:30: Dr. Mary Ann Woodruff 07:43: Molly Fields 09:16: Dr. Lee Beers 10:31: Mark Del Monte 14:13: Katherine Beckmann and Ira Hillman 25:29: Stephanie Smiley and Dr. John Duby 35:45: Dr. David Willis

Nov 27, 2025 • 28min
Returning to Gratitude
We're thankful, all year round, to those who read aloud to young children and who encourage shared reading with others. To celebrate Thanksgiving 2025, we're revisiting a powerful selection of stories from Traci Sorell, Ann Clare LeZotte, and Dr Sayantani DasGupta, three children's authors who joined us share their own stories of thanks.

Nov 13, 2025 • 36min
Fostering Health: Meeting the Needs of Children and Adolescents in Foster Care
Over 200,000 children enter foster care each year in the United States. How can we create safe, stable, and nurturing environments for foster children who have, by definition, experienced a rupture of at least one of these elements? Dr. Camille Broussard, Executive Committee member for the American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Foster Care, Adoption, and Kinship Care and co-editor in chief of Fostering Health: Health Care for Children and Adolescents in Foster Care, joins us to talk about relational health for children in foster care.


