Clear, compassionate guidance for the first year of life from a Labour & Delivery and ER doctor.
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Dr. Kailey Buller is a double board-certified ER and Family physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans. She translates the chaos of pregnancy, birth, and the first year into clear steps parents can use tonight—without shame or jargon. Based near Hamilton, Ontario; available virtually and in person.
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Dr. Kailey Buller is a double board-certified Emergency and Family physician and the author of Surviving Tiny Humans. After delivering babies and caring for families from the nursery to the ER, she became a mom and realized how much “normal stuff” parents are never taught. Kailey brings that missing, practical guidance to life with plain language, humour, and deep respect for overwhelmed families. Her work covers postpartum recovery, feeding (breast and bottle), sleep, newborn safety, and the “when to worry” questions that keep parents up at night. She speaks to parents, clinicians, and community groups across Canada and is available for interviews, panels, and keynotes.
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Dr. Kailey Buller is a double board-certified Emergency and Family physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans. She cares for families across the full spectrum—from labour and delivery to newborn emergencies and everyday concerns in the clinic and ER. Becoming a mother herself revealed a gap: parents are often sent home without the simple, practical steps that make the first year safer and less frightening. Kailey’s work fills that gap. She explains what’s normal (and what’s not), how to make good choices when you’re exhausted, and when to seek help—without shame, scare tactics, or jargon. Her speaking and media topics include postpartum recovery, feeding without guilt, newborn safety and triage, sleep and development, and partner roles in the early weeks. Kailey is an engaging guest and speaker who makes complex topics easy to understand and immediately useful. She is based near Hamilton, Ontario, and is available for virtual and in-person events.
The truths of postpartum care hospitals don’t have time to cover
Baby triage at home: simple steps that prevent panic
From the ER to the nursery: a doctor-mom on what actually helps
The other side of the bed: what the journey to motherhood taught this doctor to do better
“These aren’t trials of toughness – pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum are seasons that deserves care.”
“There are few universal truths in parenting: car seats are good; car hammocks – not so much. Beyond that, there are many right ways to parent. Doing it differently doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong”
“Good postpartum care starts with telling the truth about how hard it can be.”
“Loneliness, anger, fear, anxiety, depression – these feelings are complications, not character flaws.”