Let's Talk Tri Delta

From Tri Delta to TikTok: Pediatrician Heather Felton on Parenting and Social Media

Episode Summary

Join Tri Delta CEO Mindy Tucker, Southern Methodist, as she sits down with Dr. Heather Dettro Felton, Kentucky—a dedicated pediatrician, author and social media advocate. Heather is a full-time pediatrician with Norton Healthcare, an associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, a published author and a trusted voice on social media, where she helps parents navigate health and safety in the digital age.

Episode Notes

Heather shares her journey from Tri Delta roots to balancing a full-time medical career with raising three daughters, all while offering practical advice for keeping kids safe, healthy and happy—both online and off. 

Heather is passionate about providing practical guidance for families—whether it’s online safety, screen time management or everyday parenting challenges. As a Child Passenger Safety Technician, she’s also committed to physical safety and advocating for children in all aspects of life. With her warm, down-to-earth approach, Heather breaks down complex health information into advice that’s easy to understand and implement.

Whether you’re a parent, a caregiver or just curious about how kids use social media, this conversation is full of practical tips, thoughtful reflections and inspiration.

Episode Transcription

[From Tri Delta to TikTok: Pediatrician Heather Felton on Parenting and Social Media]

 

This transcript was created using automated technologies and may contain errors.

 

Welcome back to another episode of our Let's Talk Tri Delta podcast. I'm Mindy Tucker,

and I get to serve as Tri Delta CEO, a job that I love. And one of the reasons I

love it is because I get to do these podcasts with these amazing guests. Today, I'm

really excited to be joined by Dr. Heather Dettro Felton from our Delta Road chapter

at the University of Kentucky. That's why I'm thrilled to welcome her. She is a

pediatrician, social media influencer, published author. Her work has been featured in

Parents.com and throughout the National Institutes of Health at the NIH, you may

know her from TikTok where she helps fight health misinformation in a way that's

easy to understand and digest. I can't wait to dig into that. She is a full-time

pediatrician with Norton Healthcare and an associate professor at the University of

Louisville School of Medicine. I don't know how she has time to do anything else.

So far, I'm tired. She's got a lot going on. At Louisville, she's helping to

educate the next generation of physicians, which I think is really cool as a legacy

for her. We're also going to talk about being a mom. She is raising kids who were

preteens during the pandemic and dealing with the risk of social media. And I know

how tricky this can be to navigate as a parent screens and online sharing and all

that kind of stuff. So I'm really excited to dig in with her today about her roots

and being a doctor, all of this online stuff that we're dealing with and just

balancing all of it as a parent and a working parent at that. So Heather, welcome

to the podcast. Thank you. Thank you. It's so fun to be here. Yeah, I'm excited to

kind of dig in. I always like to start with your Tri Delta story. So how did you

end up at the University of Kentucky and what really drew you to Tri Delta there?

So, I went to high school in Western Kentucky, and I was interested in staying in

state. I had friends, close friends who were going to UK. And then family who were

in Greek life. Like it was something I had always kind of assumed that I wanted to

do. And so went through Rush. I had a couple of friends who were in Tri Delta.

And the chapter really stood out to me. It's a beautiful chapter with lots of

really great young women. I found a home there. I found lots of care and support.

And so, I really enjoyed my time at tried out there. Awesome.

What year did you join the chapter? I joined, I think it was 2003.

I joined as a sophomore.

And so, I think it was 2003. And then I was class of 2006. Okay.

So, you served as the technology chair for your chapter. And I'm trying to think

back to like 2003. Where were we in terms of like social media land and all that?

What was that like at that particular time? I think I think I was the first

technology chair. I think it was a new office that they made. And my original job

was to either to build or to like edit our chapter website.

Facebook, I think, came to the University of Kentucky in 2004. Okay. Because back in

the day, it was, you had to have a college email address to join Facebook.

Right. And it was only certain colleges. Like, it rolled out slowly.

And so, I remember when it came to UK, and so you could only make your personal

profile, there wasn't an organization, like Tri Delta didn't have a page on Facebook and

there was no Instagram or anything like that. Yeah. Wow. That's so crazy to think

back to that time. And now we're in a different world. It was a very different

world. How did Tri Delta to sort of prepare you or compliment what you were doing.

I guess you were pre-med at that point. You knew you were going to medical school.

Like how to try it out to play into sort of preparing you or supporting you

through that? I think it is, it was such a big part for me,

especially in two different ways when I think back on it. I think one that every

class that I had, there was another tried out there or somebody who had taken it

before. I had a mentor. I had a study buddy. I had somebody there who could

support me academically. I had alumni who were pre-med or going to medical school

or studying for the MCAT, but there's always somebody to go to ask advice for.

But also, even if you're choosing a rigorous program, that can't be the only thing

that you do, you're going to go crazy. And so, there was an outlet to you know,

decorate the house or go to a game or just hang out with friends. And you have to

have that as part of a well-balanced life. Otherwise, it's going to be so stressful

and chaotic all the time. And I think that there was this support academically where

I needed it, but also an outlet when I needed a break. Yeah, that makes sense.

I think people don't really, I think sometimes you can't get down that rabbit hole

of like, I'm doing this and I'm so focused on this. And I think it's one of the

beautiful things that sorority experience brings you. We support the academics and the

leadership training, but also the friendship and the social opportunities as well. And

exactly, that balance is really important. I think you're right. So, you step into

this career. What led you to pediatrics? How did this end up being your specialty?

My dad was a family medicine physician. And so, I went into medical school kind of

thinking that I was going to do some kind of primary care, something where I was

going to work in a clinic and people were going to come to me and I was going to

grow with them. That was always my thought. And so family medicine was high on my

list. it always kept coming back to kids every single rotation that I did in

medical school I was always looking for the opportunity to care for children and

there are lots of different ways that you can do that but I think that for me it

was just if that's really what I'm looking for all the time then why not just do

kids it's a it's a lot more fun I think the medicine is really interesting because,

you know, taking care of an infant and an 18 year old are very different things.

And even not just like socially in the way that we would think about them, but

even their physiology and how their bodies work is different. And I always thought

that that was fascinating too. Yeah. It is so interesting to have to think about

it. It's a different kind of human. It's just give them the Advil or the title of

it. Like you're right. Yeah. Go into these growing bodies and I have two kids.

And I've been through all kinds of things with them medically. And so, it's just

interesting how they,

how the growth spurts, how the growth part of what they're going through is so

makes their care so different. Yes. And what they're able to mentally handle and how

they're going to cope with each challenge is very different as they age. and the

family dynamics I'll play a part of it. But I really love not just having like

this one individual patient, but it is this family, but I really thrive in that.

And I love, you know, seeing a family and asking how their siblings are and really

getting to know so many different people. It's a great way to build relationships.

And I really love that. I love that for you. How do you balance? I mean,

it feels like a pretty demanding career. How do you balance that with raising three

kids? I mean, I guess pediatrics and being a mom, they go,

they compliment each other. I often will joke that like my, my doctor brain and my

mom brain and the way that I think about my children, like they don't talk to each

other. I have very bad medical judgment when it comes to my own children. Like the

common children have no shoes always yes but i do i do think in some ways they

complement each other and I can I can set boundaries and say like this this is my

family time and I'm going to protect that and this is for me and for us over here

and it's different for my career and but when I'm there I'm going to be a hundred

percent there and so I think that that's kind of the way that my personality works

where I can section things off to give the most attention to where I need to at

the moment. Yeah, that's smart. I think trying to do all in the moment doesn't

work, trying to juggle too much at the same time. But if you can coordinate off,

that is helpful. So, let's get into this parenting stuff,

which is not for the faint of heart, as we know tell me about your kids. They're

ages. You have three. Three girls. Okay. They are seven,

nine, and twelve.

So very different ages and different challenges.

I try certainly to follow my own advice. I give myself grace and I give my

family's grace too because there's kind of this idea of what is perfect and what

we're striving for. And then there is, I did the best that I could do today.

That is just fine. That's what we could do today. And we didn't eat all of our

vegetables and it will be fine. We'll try again tomorrow or whatever the challenge

is. But grace is super important, I think. So, I have two boys. They're now 14 and

17. I have no idea how we got here and they're both taller than me and I don't

know how this happens um I mean I do know how it happens but I just don't know

how this happens so fast so fast yeah but I resonate it resonates with me to

hear this like this idea of grace and um the idea that you make what like you

don't get everything perfect one day that doesn't matter the next day you get to

start over and you get to beating ourselves up over the one thing we didn't get

right. I think it was something we do as parents. And that grace. I see a lot of

parents who put a lot of pressure on themselves to be perfect all of the time.

And I'm very quick to say, I want you to be okay with not being perfect all of

the time. And nobody is. Like that, that I think is the biggest secret and getting

to talk with families in a little exam room all the time, the things that they're

concerned about and the things that they've done, and knowing that there's not a

single person out there who is perfect, no, even if they look like they have it

all put together, they don't. And trying to compare yourself to somebody else isn't

going to be healthy for anyone. And so, we can just, we can accept that and say,

I will do my best next time. And that's going to be okay. And I think, you know,

we haven't gotten into the social media piece of this, but I think that's so much

a part of it, because we see everyone else's best moments. Yeah. On social media.

Yeah, very curated view. Yeah. Exactly what they wanted you to see. And those will

hit right when you're living your worst moment in life. moment in life, I think.

That is really hard to do the comparison. And I always love that phrase comparison

is the thief of joy. Yes, it is. I mean, it is. And I really don't want people

to compare one sibling to another. They're two different kids,

your family to somebody else's, your, your motherhood or parenthood journey to

somebody else's is all going to look very different and it's going to change day to

day. Yeah. I've also learned, just in talking to people, I think everyone else is

struggling to. We're all, like, none of it is perfect and all that. And the more

you talk and share with each other, I think you learn just how, what other

challenges people are running into and how common what your experience experiences.

Yes. There's a lot more support for it when you're open about it. And I think if

you are looking for support, then being vulnerable in that way is a good way to

find other people to say, I'm going through the exact same thing with my kids.

I'm finding the exact same challenges. and you'll find that you're not alone.

Was there any parenting advice that you used to give before you had kids that

changed once you had kids? I think that the biggest thing, I remember like talking

to parents about like babies, like especially like colicky infants or gassy infants

or babies with reflux and, you know, being so exhausted and going through medical

school and residency and thinking that I knew what exhaustion was, and it is

absolutely exhausting. But I had a baby after all of my training was complete and

nothing compared to having a newborn. I really thought back and thought, I can't

believe I ever said that to a parent about what to do when baby wouldn't stop

crying when they were inconsolable, when you were so exhausted and frustrated

yourself, it's really an experience that until you like walk in those shoes,

it's so hard to appreciate what they're experiencing in that moment. And it's so

easy to also forget what it was like when you were there. I've done it three times

now. And thinking back on it, it's hard to sometimes remember exactly just how hard

it was. But I like to give lots of grace to families who are in it and who,

especially the ones who are experiencing it for the first time and really had no

idea what it was going to be like to take care of a newborn right after you

yourself just had a baby and how challenging all of that is. Yeah. I always find

myself when I see, I travel a lot. So, I see a mom in the airport with it with a

child throwing a huge I just want to be like mom you got this it's okay you know

they're feeling so self-conscious and so many of those moments where um I think

once you've been through it you're way more compassionate about what yes definitely

well let's talk a little bit about technology and social media and safety um what

prompted you to start sharing online around social media presence and safety and what

really got you started in this? I have been on social media personally,

probably since 2004, like in college, but I made my first professional account during

the pandemic. And it just felt like there was so, there were so many things that

were confusing for so many people that I thought, I do have something important to

say about all of these different things that are happening. And part of my job is

not just seeing patients, but I teach medical students and pediatric residents. I

thought, I bet I would be a good person who could explain some of this because

it's part of what I do. And so, you know, it's one little step at a time.

You make a couple of posts, a couple of videos, and you find out what works and

what resonates. And I just kept continuing it and building this,

I think, professional portfolio of medical information that's searchable across

different platforms. And now it's something that it's kind of a,

I won't say well-oiled machine. I will say it's something that I can do much

easier than I did at the beginning because I've gotten better at it. Yeah.

So what are some of your tips for keeping our kids safe online? I think postponing

is probably the biggest thing, like waiting until they really are old enough and

mature enough. And I think that's one of the pressures that's so hard to deal with

because a lot of kids will get phones early or get a social media presence early.

But then I think also realizing that you wouldn't give your kid a driver's license

and then just say like, well, good luck. You'd want to go out and drive with them

and give them tips and talk to them about it. And I think that the same is true

for social media, that you should watch videos together. I do that with my daughter

now, my oldest. And we talk about, well, why do we think that this is fake?

Why might this not be real? Maybe they're acting it out. Maybe it's AI. Let's read

through some of the comments together and see what that is like. And we can talk

about, like, is this nice? Was that kind? What would you do if somebody left a

comment like that? And they were talking about you, all of these different things.

And, you know, I at least had the privilege of getting into social media when I

was already technically in an adult. But they're diving right into it at their teen

years, their middle school years. And I think that that would be so much more

challenging and confusing, especially in this space where if it's online,

it lives there somewhere forever. That's what I tell my patients and what I tell my

kids. And so, I think they need some guidance. They don't grow up intuitively knowing

anything about what is already there or how it could affect them in the future.

Yeah, these are good. I've obviously two boys that this is where they want to live.

And it's been so interesting to navigate, I think, and try to figure out how to

navigate with them. And some of the connections I have with them are actually

through, like, my oldest and I both love Formula One. And we trade a lot of

Instagram videos about Formula. But it's kind of become like one of our connection

points, too, in a nice way. I think it can be positive. I think it can be too.

But like you said, there's just so many ways that could go wrong too. And right

out there that you're just not able to control what they see and how they see it.

So. Yeah. So, I mean, I do you know, recommend using some of the parental controls

when you can. But you have to it like it won't be perfect all of the time. And

so, I think also talking about like what you might see and why going through their

feed with them and seeing what it is that they like let them drive. Let them

scroll and figure out. But then if you do come across something, you do have the

opportunity in the moment to talk about it. And they want to show you. I think

that's a connection point sitting down with them to do it. They you. And it's

absolutely. And so, yeah. Let's go a little bit beyond digital safety and talk about

physical safety, which I know is also for you. You are a child passenger safety

technician. I want to know what that is. I have,

it's, it, I can install and inspect car seats. Okay. Certification in car seat

training. Okay. All right.

What do you think are the most common car seat safety mistakes that people make?

I think the most common ones are actually the ones for the bigger kids. I think

people move their kids up through the different car seats too soon. We get a lot

of education about infants and their infant carrier car seats, the rear -facing car

seats. And then I think that you're several years down the road and you think,

I'm an experienced parent now. I know what I'm doing. And so, we move them into a

forward -facing car seat or a booster seat. And I think very commonly out of a

booster seat way too soon, kids need to be four -foot -nine and between 80 or 100

pounds. There's actually a longer like five point checklist to meet,

to be able to move out of a booster seat and into a seatbelt. But my, my oldest

just recently got out of a booster seat this past summer. She was 11 at the time.

But for me, I wanted her to stay there to be safe for as long as possible, as

long as she needed it. And I know, we're all so right. I mean, the day you get

rid of the car seats. It's like freedom. It's like getting out. Yes. You know, like

you're so ready. Yes. But I think you're right to not to rush that and to pay

attention to the rules on that.

So, I think we could probably talk about this safety stuff and the digital and all

that stuff like all day long. And I wish we could. I find other ways to get you

talking to our members. I love it. I can do that too. Yeah. Well, and I have it

on my social media pages so they can certainly, like I talk about all of these

kinds of things. So, there is an activity. Go ahead. You brought it up. So, let's go

ahead. You want to share where people can find you online and then we'll talk a

little bit more about Tri Delta and how. Yep. I am at Heather Felton MD across all

of my different platforms. I'm most active on TikTok and Instagram, but you may find

me on, like, YouTube and things. I just don't post there as often. Yeah. Okay.

Well, I hope our listeners will check it out and go find you. It sounds like

there's a lot of good tips and tricks there, not even tricks, just tips. I'm a

general pediatrician, so I talk about a very wide variety of different topics.

Yeah. Okay. How does Tri Delta to show up in your life today? I mean,

I still have, especially through social media, like keeping in touch with,

you know, girls, women who I was in my sorority with. And then,

you know, in my community, there, there isn't a chapter at the University of

Louisville, but there is an alumni chapter. So, you can still make connections with

alumni across the country who now live in Louisville and just panhellenic women as

well who experienced Greek life. I was actually talking to somebody about it very

recently who had gone to U of L. So it wasn't a child chapter.

We were in different chapters. But It was just, it's fun and it's like a connection

point to, you know, bring up conversation to talk about and share your experiences.

Yeah. I think you're right. I think there's, when you've gone through the experience

at the collegiate level,

you do find commonalities, not only with your Tri Delta sisters, but with your

Panolinic sisters as well as you meet them and step into the world with them. And

I think we're all part of a really important experience that uh set you up for the

rest of your life I don't know about you but i find my you know my friendships

and tried out to have evolved over time um based on whatever season or stage of

life I'm in and you know even with the chapter sister is at different points in

different ways I'm sure you've seen that play out as well yep Absolutely. And I had

a couple who moved to Louisville around the same time that I did,

others that have moved away. But you still have those connections. And I do really

appreciate still getting to keep in touch, even if it's just like waiting for a

Christmas card to come in the mail. Yeah. It's that time of year right now as

we're talking. I know this is going to air in January, I it's just we have all

kinds of different ways we keep up with our our sisters and um I think it's it's

it's fun to watch those relationships grow yeah over the years well I can't thank

you enough for joining us it's been fun to talk to you and um to learn a little

bit about what you do and um how to uh keep our kids safe and uh I think it's

just such an important topic and as a fellow parent Thanks for putting yourself out

there and sharing all of the wisdom and experience with all of the rest of us. And

so I hope everybody will check out her social media and see what she's got going

there, especially if you're a parent. I've got a new Tri Delta friend who will help

you navigate all those challenges. So, thanks for being with us and sharing everything

with us today. Thank you so much. I really have fun. Yeah. So, for our members out

there, I hope you'll check out Heather online, Dr. Heather. Don't want to diminish

that at all, the accomplishment of getting there. We're so proud to have you in our

sisterhood. So, check her out online, get some tips from her on parenting and keeping

our kids safe, especially online, something we're all worried about on a regular

basis. This is airing in January. And in January, our registration for convention.

We'll be hitting the presses. You'll find it online. So, stay tuned. Our convention

is being held in Denver at the Gaylord Rockies from June 26th through June 29th.

And we hope as many of you as possible will join us there. We love it when you

like, subscribe and rate our podcast. We have three stars in our Crescent, but we

love those five -star ratings. So, bring it on. Thanks for joining us today. And

until next time, Delta Love.