Voices For Their Future

Protect Their Future

Welcome to Voices for Their Future, the podcast where we break down the biggest public health challenges facing kids today—and what we can do about them. We’re a group of parents, pediatricians, and advocates who believe in fighting for a healthier future for all children. In each episode, we sit down with leading scientists, policymakers, and experts to uncover the stories behind the headlines—whether it’s the fight for vaccine access, air quality in schools, or the policies shaping our kids' health. Because when parents are informed, they can be powerful advocates.

Episodes

  1. 04/29/2025

    Reclaiming Care- Black Mental Health, Parenting, and Survival

    How do Black families navigate pregnancy, parenting, and mental health in systems that too often fail them? In this conversation, researcher and advocate Nadia Mbonde explores the double pandemic of COVID-19 and systemic racism, the gaps in maternal mental health care, and how community care models are reshaping what support can—and should—look like. Together, we examine not only the systemic failures but the practical steps families and communities are taking to build futures rooted in dignity, resilience, and real care.To read "How to Be Disabled in a Pandemic” online, please click ⁠here⁠. About Nadia Mbonde Nadia Naomi Mbonde is a Mad Black mother, scholar, multimedia artist, and mental health doula in Brooklyn, New York. A Ph.D. Candidate in Medical and Sociocultural Anthropology at New York University, Nadia’s research addresses how perinatal mental health disparities contribute to the ongoing Black maternal mortality and morbidity crisis in the United States. She has trained as a birth and postpartum doula and a peer support specialist facilitating support groups and regularly speaking and teaching about mental health and reproduction at academic conferences and grassroots mental health and doula organizations. As a multimedia artist, Nadia translates her lived experience with mental health challenges, including psychosis and altered states, as she journeyed through miscarriage, pregnancy, birth, and postpartum through dance, film, photography, and digital art. Through her art, activism, and scholarship, Nadia seeks to integrate Mad liberation and reproductive justice for birthing people and their families to thrive.

    51 min
  2. 04/01/2025

    When Disability Services Disappear: What Covid-19 Taught us about Caregiving Through Crisis

    What happens when children with disabilities age out of the systems meant to support them? And what can families do to ensure their futures are protected? In this episode, anthropologists and authors Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp explore the often-overlooked experiences of disabled caregivers and families navigating complex systems during and beyond the pandemic. We talk about how policy falls short, what protections families should expect, and the creative forms of resilience and care that disabled communities have built in the face of systemic neglect. This conversation offers both a critical lens and a hopeful one—rooted in the power of community, advocacy, and the enduring brilliance of disabled lives. To read "How to be Disabled in a Pandemic" online, please go to: https://opensquare.nyupress.org/books/9781479830909/ About Faye Ginsburg: Faye Ginsburg is David Kriser Professor of Anthropology at New York University. She is the cofounder of the NYU Center for Disability Studies and the Center for Media, Culture & History.  She is author of Contested Lives: The Abortion Debate in an American Community, coauthor of Disability Worlds (2024) and co-editor of How to be Disabled in a Pandemic (2025), along with other award-winning books. About Rayna Rapp: Rayna Rapp is Professor Emerita in the Department of Anthropology at New York University, and the author of Testing Women, Testing the Fetus: The Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America, coauthor of Disability Worlds, and co-editor of How to be Disabled in a Pandemic (2025), along with other award-winning books.

    45 min
  3. 03/17/2025

    Protecting Kids' Health--What Parents Can Do Right Now

    How is public health shifting under this administration, and what does it mean for children and families? In this episode of Voices for Their Future, Dr. Kavita Patel, a physician, policy expert, and former White House health advisor, breaks down the current threats to public health and the real-world changes parents might see—from funding cuts to misinformation creeping into pediatrician visits. We discuss: ✅ What’s happening to public health policy right now—and why it matters ✅ How so-called “informed consent” is being weaponized to undermine vaccines ✅ What Dr. Patel is doing personally to keep her family safe ✅ Concrete actions parents and communities can take—from engaging with companies to pushing for stronger protections from elected officials Public health is under attack, but parents aren’t powerless. This conversation is about more than staying informed—it’s about taking action. SHOW NOTES: During the episode, Dr. Kavita Patel discussed the growing concerns around data privacy in healthcare and how personal health information could be misused. She shared this template letter that you can use to request greater privacy protections for your medical data under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regulations. 📄 Access the letter here: Privacy Request Template Looking for reliable, science-backed medical information? Check out OpenEvidence.com, a trusted resource for staying informed with evidence-based healthcare insights. Dr. Kavita Patel mentioned it as a great tool for cutting through misinformation and getting the facts.

    36 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Welcome to Voices for Their Future, the podcast where we break down the biggest public health challenges facing kids today—and what we can do about them. We’re a group of parents, pediatricians, and advocates who believe in fighting for a healthier future for all children. In each episode, we sit down with leading scientists, policymakers, and experts to uncover the stories behind the headlines—whether it’s the fight for vaccine access, air quality in schools, or the policies shaping our kids' health. Because when parents are informed, they can be powerful advocates.