
'Mind the Kids': an ACAMH podcast
by The Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health
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Estimated from 19 chart positions in 19 markets.
By chart position
- 🇬🇧GB · Social Sciences#28100K to 300K
- 🇦🇺AU · Social Sciences#1145K to 30K
- 🇨🇦CA · Social Sciences#1825K to 30K
- 🇰🇷KR · Social Sciences#7310K to 30K
- 🇸🇪SE · Social Sciences#1671K to 10K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
48K to 159K🎙 Daily cadence·395 episodes·Last published yesterday - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
160K to 531K🇬🇧56%🇦🇺6%🇨🇦6%+16 more - Active Followers
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64K to 212K
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
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From 15 epsHosts
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Recent episodes
S9 Ep7: Similar vocabulary but different socioeconomic status, means unequal educational outcomes - Mind the Kids podcast
Jun 24, 2026
25m 32s
S9 Ep6: Why sleep is at the core of children's mental health - Mind the Kids podcast
Jun 17, 2026
26m 02s
S9 Ep5: Beyond the Diagnosis: Supporting Executive Function to Improve Autism Mental Health - Mind the Kids podcast
Jun 10, 2026
43m 14s
S8 Ep4: Understanding Climate Anxiety in Youths - a Mind the Kids podcast
Jun 3, 2026
31m 21s
S8 Ep3: How Maternal Anorexia Shapes Offspring Mental Health - a Mind the Kids podcast
May 27, 2026
34m 07s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/24/26 | ![]() S9 Ep7: Similar vocabulary but different socioeconomic status, means unequal educational outcomes - Mind the Kids podcast | In this Mind the Kids podcast, we explore how early childhood vocabulary links to later educational outcomes—and why socioeconomic inequality continues to shape children’s life chances, even when ability appears similar.Host Clara Faria is joined by Dr. Emma Thornton (University of Manchester) and Professor Danielle Matthews (University of Sheffield) to discuss their research published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Using data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, they examines whether children with the same early language skills achieve similar GCSE outcomes, and how socioeconomic circumstances influence that trajectory.The findings challenge simple meritocratic assumptions. While stronger vocabulary at age five predicts better educational attainment overall, this relationship varies significantly across socioeconomic groups. Children from disadvantaged backgrounds have markedly lower chances of achieving key GCSE benchmarks—even with strong early language skills—while those from more advantaged backgrounds are more likely to succeed regardless of early ability.This conversation unpacks the implications for early intervention, education policy, and equity in child development. It also highlights the need for more targeted, evidence-based support for families and schools, and a deeper understanding of the mechanisms linking early cognitive skills to long-term outcomes.Read the JCPP paper ‘Unequal educational outcomes for children with similar early childhood vocabulary but different socioeconomic circumstances' https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70117Emma Thornton, Danielle Matthews, Praveetha Patalay, Colin BannardFirst published: 26 January 2026 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://bit.ly/4fF4BBWVisit https://www.acamh.orgFacebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMHInstagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camhBluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.socialX https://x.com/acamh | 25m 32s | ||||||
| 6/17/26 | ![]() S9 Ep6: Why sleep is at the core of children's mental health - Mind the Kids podcast | In this episode of Mind the Kids, the podcast from the Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health (ACAMH), host Dr. Clara Faria — academic clinical fellow in child psychiatry — is joined by Alina Marinca, PhD student in Psychological Medicine at Queen Mary University of London and clinical psychologist, whose research is funded by the London Interdisciplinary School of Science Doctoral Training Partnership.Alina shares findings from her JCPP Advances paper ‘Sleep disturbance as a transdiagnostic marker of children's mental health difficulties: A network analysis of item-level associations between different types of sleep problems and different behavioural and emotional symptoms'.The study draws on data from the Development of Emotional Resilience observational cohort — a school-based sample of over 500 primary school children aged 7 to 12 from East London, one of the most ethnically diverse and economically deprived urban cohorts in UK child mental health research.Using network analysis — a powerful statistical approach that maps relationships between symptoms simultaneously — the study examines how specific sleep problems relate to emotional difficulties (anxiety and depression) and behavioural difficulties (hyperactivity, inattention, and conduct problems) in middle childhood, moving beyond the composite sleep scores that have dominated previous research.The headline finding is striking: sleep anxiety and general anxiety emerge as the most central, influential nodes in the network — sitting at the core of children's emotional and behavioural difficulties and functioning as a transdiagnostic mechanism across multiple mental health conditions. Emotional symptoms were found to be more tightly interwoven with sleep problems than behavioural symptoms, a developmentally meaningful finding with direct implications for how we assess and treat sleep disturbances in primary school-aged children.Alina and Clara discuss what this means for school-based mental health intervention, why sleep should no longer be treated as a secondary or peripheral feature of child mental health, and how a modular, targeted approach focusing on sleep-related anxiety could benefit children, parents, educators, and clinicians alike. The episode closes with a preview of Alina's next research phase: a longitudinal network analysis tracking whether these core sleep and anxiety symptoms remain stable over time.Essential listening for anyone working in child mental health, sleep research, school-based intervention, or child and adolescent psychiatry.Read the CAMH journal paper ‘Sleep disturbance as a transdiagnostic marker of children's mental health difficulties: A network analysis of item-level associations between different types of sleep problems and different behavioural and emotional symptoms'Alina A. Marinca, Julia E. Michalek, Alice M. Gregory, Afia Ali, Jennifer Y. F. LauFirst published: 04 March 2026 https://doi.org/10.1002/jcv2.70104Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://bit.ly/4fF4BBWVisit https://www.acamh.orgFacebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMHInstagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camhBluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.socialX https://x.com/acamh | 26m 02s | ||||||
| 6/10/26 | ![]() S9 Ep5: Beyond the Diagnosis: Supporting Executive Function to Improve Autism Mental Health - Mind the Kids podcast✨ | executive functionautism+3 | Professor Lauren Kenworthy | Association for Child and Adolescent Mental HealthChildren's National Hospital+2 | — | executive functionautism+6 | — | 43m 14s | |
| 6/3/26 | ![]() S8 Ep4: Understanding Climate Anxiety in Youths - a Mind the Kids podcast✨ | climate anxietyyouth mental health+4 | Dr. Joanne Park | Mount Royal UniversityChild and Adolescent Mental Health+1 | — | climate anxietyyouth+5 | — | 31m 21s | |
| 5/27/26 | ![]() S8 Ep3: How Maternal Anorexia Shapes Offspring Mental Health - a Mind the Kids podcast✨ | maternal anorexiaoffspring mental health+4 | Professor Nathalie AugerProfessor Howard Steiger | The Association for Child and Adolescent Mental HealthMaternal anorexia nervosa and risk of mental and neurodevelopmental morbidity in offspring | — | maternal mental healthanorexia nervosa+5 | — | 34m 07s | |
| 5/20/26 | ![]() S8 Ep2: Measuring Teen Mental Health Across 12 Nations - a Mind the Kids podcast✨ | adolescent mental healthcross-country study+5 | Dr. Ariadna Albajara-SaenzDr. Amirah Wahdi | JCPP AdvancesACAMH+1 | — | teen mental healthlow-income countries+6 | — | 41m 55s | |
| 5/13/26 | ![]() S8 Ep1: ADHD & Autism: Over diagnosed or under-recognised? Prof Tamsin Ford in a Mind the Kids podcast✨ | ADHDAutism+5 | Professor Tamsin Ford | University of CambridgeACAMH | — | ADHDAutism+5 | — | 36m 01s | |
| 5/6/26 | ![]() S7 Ep9: Anxiety, does the apple fall far from the tree? A Mind the Kids podcast✨ | Anxiety disordersFamily influence on mental health+4 | Professor Umar ToseebDr Sigrid Elfström | Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | — | anxietyfamilial transmission+5 | — | 40m 13s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() S7 Ep9: Mind the Kids: ‘Delivering School Intervention: Culture, Context and Conflict’✨ | mental healthschool intervention+3 | Professor Jean Francois Trani | ACAMH | Afghanistan | mental healthschool intervention+5 | — | 42m 41s | |
| 4/22/26 | ![]() S7 Ep8: Mind the Kids 'Protecting Mental Health, the Power of Positive'✨ | mental healthpositive affect+4 | Dr. Jamie Hanson | ACAMHPositive affect as a developmental mediator of early adversity and internalizing psychopathology | — | mental healthpositive psychology+7 | — | 46m 27s | |
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| 4/15/26 | ![]() S7 Ep7: Mind the Kids ‘Regular sleep, the balm of hurt minds'✨ | adolescent sleepmental health+4 | Dr. Konstantin Drexl | The Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health | — | teenagerssleep+6 | — | 45m 19s | |
| 4/8/26 | ![]() S7 Ep5: Children with MID, a multi-factored intervention offers best protection✨ | mild intellectual difficultiesemotional wellbeing+3 | Dr. Foteini Tseliou | ACAMHFactors Associated with Better Emotional, Behavioural and Educational Outcomes in Children with Mild Intellectual Disabilities+1 | — | mild intellectual difficultiesemotional wellbeing+4 | — | 45m 01s | |
| 4/1/26 | ![]() S7 Ep4: Mind the Kids 'Adolescence and Appearance. AI eat your words'✨ | AI in mental healthadolescence+3 | Dr. Florence Sheen | NHS | — | AI chatbotsmental health+5 | — | 52m 57s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() S7 Ep3: Mind the Kids - Trauma responsive care - It's all about me✨ | trauma-informed careadverse childhood experiences+3 | Dr. Sarah Parry | University of Manchester | — | traumaadverse childhood experiences+3 | — | 40m 21s | |
| 3/18/26 | ![]() S7 Ep2: Mind the Kids - Inpatient Insights✨ | inpatient caremental health+4 | Dr Dawn CutlerGuy Larrington | UCLUniversity of York+1 | — | inpatient admissionmental health difficulties+4 | — | 39m 23s | |
| 3/11/26 | ![]() S6 Ep8: Mind the Kids: Navigating the service cliff - Supporting autistic youth transition into adulthood✨ | autismtransition to adulthood+4 | Professor Julie Lowndes Taylor | Vanderbilt University Medical CenterASSIST+1 | — | autistic youthtransition+5 | — | 44m 18s | |
| 3/4/26 | ![]() S7 Ep1: Mind the Kids - Tics: Education, Education, Education✨ | Tourette's syndrometics+4 | — | UCLUniversity of York+1 | — | Tourette's syndrometics+5 | — | 39m 30s | |
| 2/25/26 | ![]() S6 Ep7: Mind the Kids: Lessons from the ABCD data revolution | This episode of 'Mind the Kids: Lessons from the ABCD data revolution' unpacks why “how we measure puberty” really matters for understanding adolescent mental health and development. Professor Adriene Beltz talks to Mark Tebbs about the huge US Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, which is following nearly 12,000 young people over 10 years with regular brain scans and surveys, giving an unprecedented window into how early experiences shape later outcomes.While investigating multisite pain and sex differences, her team stumbled on a problem: researchers using ABCD data were often relying on a convenient categorical puberty score (pre‑, early, mid‑, late, post‑puberty) that drops information and heavily weights the onset of menstruation, rather than using a richer continuous score based on all five pubertal development items. Their analyses show the continuous score is generally more reliable, better aligned with existing puberty research, and less distorted by big “jumps” around menarche, especially for girls.The conversation becomes a wider call to action: if puberty timing and tempo can shape lifelong trajectories in mental health, pain, and social experiences, then getting the measurement wrong risks misleading conclusions and missed opportunities for prevention. Adriene urges researchers to be thoughtful and transparent about how they score puberty in large datasets, to report clearly what they used, and to remember that puberty is a normative but highly sensitive transition where context, culture, and support all matter just as much as hormones. Read the paper 'Research Review: On the (mis)use of puberty data in the ABCD Study® – a systematic review, problem illustration, and path forward' at https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70035 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://www.acamhlearn.orgVisit https://www.acamh.orgFacebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMH Instagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camhBluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.socialX https://x.com/acamh | 39m 08s | ||||||
| 2/18/26 | ![]() S6 Ep6: Mind the Kids: Prenatal substance exposure - hope not judgement | hThis powerful episode dives into how a mother’s own childhood trauma can quietly shape the emotional lives of her children – and how that cycle can be broken. Drawing on a rare 12‑year study of around 300 mostly Black, highly disadvantaged families in the US Midwest, Dr Meeyoung Min unpacks how her team followed mothers and babies from birth through early adolescence to understand what really drives later mental health.Far from blaming mothers, the episode situates these risks in a wider context of poverty, limited opportunity, and unresolved trauma, and leans into hope rather than inevitability. Dr Min makes a compelling case for pregnancy and the early postnatal period as a “golden window” for support – from practical help and non‑judgemental social networks to community and faith groups that wrap around both parent and child – showing that with the right support, intergenerational patterns of harm can be disrupted and futures can be changed.The conversation reveals two major pathways: first, mothers who experienced more childhood maltreatment tend to struggle more with their own mental health, making it harder to stay emotionally available, regulate feelings, and use calm, consistent parenting – all of which is linked to greater anxiety, low mood, and acting‑out behaviours in their 12‑year‑olds. Second, prenatal exposure to substances such as cocaine, alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana appears to alter developing brain systems involved in stress, independently increasing the risk of externalising behaviour.You can read the main JCPP paper discussed in this episode, “Intergenerational transmission of maternal childhood maltreatment, prenatal substance exposure, and internalizing and externalizing symptoms in early adolescence at age 12” via https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70030Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://www.acamhlearn.orgVisit https://www.acamh.orgFacebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMH Instagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camhBluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.socialX https://x.com/acamh | 50m 33s | ||||||
| 2/12/26 | ![]() S6 Ep5: Mind the Kids - How motor & social skills shape language learning, as captured by genes | What if a baby’s wobbly reach for a spoon or a make-believe tea party could quietly change the way language unfolds? In this episode of Mind The Kids, “Building Blocks: How motor and social skills shape language learning, as captured by genes” host Mark Tebbs talks with Dr Beate St Pourcain and Dr Ellen Verhoeff from the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics about what it really means to develop language in a developing body.Drawing on their JCPP study of over 6,000 children in the ALSPAC cohort, they follow a developmental cascade that starts with early gross motor milestones like sitting and crawling, moves through culturally shaped self-care and pretend-play skills like using a spoon or hosting a tea party, and then flows into vocabulary and grammar between 15 and 38 months. Along the way, they unpack how genetics and environment intertwine, why social interactions and playful routines act as gateways into language rather than just nice “add-ons,” and what this might mean for parents, carers, clinicians and educators who want to support communication in both autistic and non-autistic children. You can read the main JCPP paper discussed in this episode, “Developing language in a developing body: genetic associations of infant gross motor behaviour and self-care/symbolic actions with emerging language abilities” via https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70021 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://www.acamhlearn.org Visit https://www.acamh.org Facebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMH Instagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camh Bluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.social X https://x.com/acamh | 46m 14s | ||||||
| 2/4/26 | ![]() S6 Ep5: Mind the Kids - Genetic clues to classroom struggles | Why do some children find learning a little harder, and could their genes hold part of the answer? In this episode of Mind the Kids, entitled ‘Genetic clues to classroom struggles’, host Mark Tebbs talks with Dr. Marie-Pier Larose from the University of Turku about her recent JCPP paper. They delve into how children’s genetic predispositions—especially those linked to attention and behaviour—can influence how they learn and thrive in school. Marie-Pier shares insights from a major international study exploring the connection between early attention difficulties, mental health, and academic achievement. The discussion highlights the power of early support, the role of teachers and parents, and why understanding these genetic clues can help children reach their full potential—both in the classroom and beyond. For more details read the JCPP paper ‘Associations between genetic predisposition to mental health problems and academic achievement: a developmental perspective using two population-based cohorts’ Marie-Pier Larose, Isabel Schuurmans, Edward D. Barker, Liliana Garcia Mondragon, Henning Tiemeier, Irwin Waldman, Charlotte Cecil. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70043 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://www.acamhlearn.org Visit https://www.acamh.org Facebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMH Instagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camh Bluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.social X https://x.com/acamh | 26m 40s | ||||||
| 1/28/26 | ![]() S6 Ep4: Mind the Kids - Energized or at risk? Distinguishing subclinical hypomania in adolescents | Energized, driven, “on a high” – or at the edge of something more serious? This Mind the Kids episode, “Energized or at risk? Distinguishing subclinical hypomania in adolescents”, explores how to tell the difference between healthy teenage intensity and something more problematic. Host Mark Tebbs talks to Dr. Georgina Hosang about the topic of hypomania, as she draws on her expertise and research. The conversation unpacks what hypomania can look like at home and at school, how it overlaps with typical mood swings and ADHD, and other conditions, and which red flags suggest it’s time to seek specialist help.Listeners will hear practical guidance on what parents, carers, teachers, and young people themselves can watch for, how to talk about concerns without stigma, and why early recognition matters for safety, learning, and long‑term wellbeing. This episode is for anyone supporting adolescents who seem unusually “switched on”, wired, or risk‑taking – and who wants clear, compassionate advice on when to simply ride the wave, and when to seek assistance.For more details read the JCPP paper ‘Subclinical hypomania, psychiatric and neurodevelopmental diagnoses: phenotypic and aetiological overlap’ by Georgina M. Hosang et al. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70045Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://www.acamhlearn.org Visit https://www.acamh.org Facebook and LinkedIn search / ACAMH Instagram https://www.instagram.com/assoc.camh Bluesky https://bsky.app/profile/acamh.bsky.social X https://x.com/acamh | 42m 08s | ||||||
| 1/21/26 | ![]() S6 Ep2: Mind the Kids -When language surprises: unexpected bilingualism in autism | How can a child suddenly start speaking a language no one around them uses? This Mind the Kids episode, “When language surprises – unexpected bilingualism in autism” dives into the striking phenomenon of autistic children spontaneously acquiring and using a language that is absent from their home, school, and social world. Drawing on new research, host Mark Tebbs speaks to David Gagnon, and Dr. Alexia Ostrolenk, on this topic, and their JCPP paper. With minimally speaking autistic children, the discussion explains what unexpected bilingualism is, why it challenges traditional ideas about the role of social interaction in language learning, and how it can reveal an alternative pathway into language. Listeners will hear how parents first notice these surprising language skills, why they may be both confusing and hopeful, and what this means for supporting communication and designing interventions. The episode offers clear take home messages for families, educators, and clinicians on recognising hidden abilities, following a child’s interests (from letters and numbers to YouTube subtitles), and rethinking “plateau” periods as times of invisible but important development. For more details read the JCPP paper ‘Early manifestations of unexpected bilingualism in minimally verbal autism’ David Gagnon, Alexia Ostrolenk, Laurent Mottron https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70032 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast by registering for a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://acamhlearn.org/Home | 46m 29s | ||||||
| 1/14/26 | ![]() S6 Ep1: Mind the Kids - Irritability in teens, more than a phase | How can you tell when teen irritability is ‘just a phase’ and when it is a sign that something more serious is going on? In this episode of Mind the Kids, titled ‘Irritability in Teens More Than a Phase’ host Mark Tebbs talks with Dr Jamilah Silver, Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, whose work focuses on irritability, emotion regulation, and early emerging risk for psychopathology. Together they explore why adolescence is a ‘perfect storm’ for irritability, how it shows up in daily life at home and at school, and when persistent anger, conflict, and moodiness start to impair sleep, friendships, and learning. Jamilah shares findings from a large multinational study of adolescents across nine countries, revealing how common chronic irritability is worldwide and how it links to bullying, depression, anxiety, and lower life satisfaction. The conversation also unpacks gender differences, classroom red flags for teachers, and why clinicians are beginning to treat irritability as a transdiagnostic “front door” signal that deserves earlier screening and support. Whether you are a parent, educator, or clinician, this episode offers practical ways to spot when irritability has tipped from typical teen behaviour into something that may need specialist help. For more details read the CAMH paper “A large multinational study of irritability in adolescents” Jamilah Silver, Ellen Leibenluft, Wan-Ling Tseng, Daniel N. Klein, Pablo Vidal-Ribas, Reut Naim, Praveetha Patalay, Eoin McElroy, Argyris Stringaris https://doi.org/10.1111/camh.70008 Get a free CPD/CME certificate for listening to this podcast when you register a FREE ACAMH Learn account at https://acamhlearn.org/Home | 27m 55s | ||||||
| 1/7/26 | ![]() S4 Ep10: Mind the Kids: Cannabis - Context is everything | This episode of “Mind the Kids” offers a deeply nuanced discussion on cannabis use and abuse within family contexts and among adolescents. Hosted by Dr. Jane Gilmour and Professor Umar Toseeb, it features expert guests Professor Shelby Steuart and Victoria Bethel, who unpack the complexities of medical versus recreational cannabis, the evolving legal landscape in the US, and associated risks—especially for young people. The conversation explores how legalization affects availability and accidental exposures, the potency of cannabis products, and the challenges of regulation and safety. Listeners hear about the social and environmental factors influencing adolescent behavior, the balance of risks and potential benefits, and practical insights into harm reduction. Importantly, the episode emphasizes the need for data-led, non-judgmental approaches to understanding and responding to cannabis use among youth in a changing policy environment. It provides valuable takeaways for academics, clinicians, parents, and policymakers interested in child and adolescent mental health within the context of evolving cannabis laws. More informationCannabis and pediatric cannabis exposure – evidence from America's Poison CentersShelby R. Steuart, Victoria Bethel, W. David Bradford https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.70058 | 42m 36s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
21 placements across 19 markets.
Chart Positions
21 placements across 19 markets.

























