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450 ACEs Summit Participants Inspired to Move from Awareness to Action

 

The first full day of the Adverse Childhood Experiences 2016 Conference, hosted by the Center for Youth Wellness (CYW) and sponsored by the California Endowment, Kaiser Permanente, and Genentech, took place October 20 at the Park Central Hotel in downtown San Francisco and began with an exuberant welcome from the CYW's executive director, Mark Cloutier.

"Let's have fun," he shouted, and the 450 participants -- teachers, therapists, doctors, lawyers, and other trauma-informed professionals -- gave a shout back.

In the two years since the first California ACEs Summit, when few people even knew about ACEs, public awareness of adverse childhood experiences and their effect on children and adult mental, emotional, and physical health has grown. Thirty-two states now collect ACEs data, and on the digital network ACEsConnection, a social network for people who are implementing practices based on ACEs science, more than 11,000 people find resources, news, and network and share ideas.

Dr. Brigid McCaw of Kaiser Permanente’s Family Violence Prevention Program said that beyond awareness, we now need to build connections, advance our knowledge of the science of ACEs, and generate action. On the action front, KP is partnering with schools to provide a tool to train staff to become ACEs-informed and develop ways to help their students.

Dr. Nadine Burke-Harris, founder of CYW and perhaps the major force behind the entire ACEs movement, smiled as she took over the podium. "This moment for me is like a dream come true," and she thanked everyone building ACEs awareness, which she said is "the most important health crisis of our time."

She said that we need to move beyond awareness to build an ecosystem of ACEs-informed care, such as the simple, free ACEs screening tool that CYW developed, which has been downloaded by 1,100 clinicians.

But the single most effective intervention, she said, is "a safe, stable relationship with a caring adult," because children are as responsive to positive experiences as to adverse ones and can develop resilience as a result.

Burke-Harris also noted that her center is leading a $5 million study with Benioff Children's Hospital to study the biomarkers of ACEs; last year, the American Association of Pediatrics held a daylong seminar on ACEs at its annual symposium; and our very own ACEsConnection, founded by Jane Stevens, has become "the most powerful network."

She also cited James Redford's film, Resilience, and encouraged participants, "We have an opportunity to create a different future for our children.T he right people are in this room right now, so let's get started."

The Data Scientist

Dr. Christina Bethell is a data scientist, a professor at Johns Hopkins, and director of the Child and Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative. She flooded us with graphs and charts correlating ACEs collected in a national survey of ACEs and children's health (www.childhealthdata.org). She found that almost half the nation’s children — 35 million kids -- have experienced one or more ACEs.

She said we need to compare ACEs with measures for flourishing children, which include curiosity, calmness, and ability to complete tasks. She stressed that ACEs is not destiny, but something we can prevent and heal through many practices, such as mindfulness training and prenatal screening to insure the health of the mother does not harm the child. She wants to see a "citizen science movement" to infuse trauma-informed models into more areas of our lives, including parenting.

Successes from the Field

A panel moderated by CYW's Cloutier started off with Dr. Robert K. Ross, president and CEO of The California Endowment and who started out as a pediatrician. He compared Burke-Harris to Harriet Tubman and Bethell to Joan of Arc, and said the endowment was fully focused on early childhood investment because of its widespread impact on our society.

He said we should divert $3 billion of the $20 billion spent on incarceration into the "Nadine" fund and cautioned that because the "U.S. of A. responds very inconsistently to good science, it's going to take a political fight" to fund ACEs prevention and treatment programs.

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(l to r) Sarah Rock, Susan Salasin, Jen Hossler, Dana Brown

ACEs, he added, needs to become an issue in the 2018 California gubernatorial race, because it's obvious from the almost 40 percent decline in suspension rates in state schools where the entire community supports ACEs awareness, that the programs work. He encouraged the audience to engage communities rather than work from the top down.

Michael Newman, a lawyer who heads the California State Department of Children's Justice, a watchdog agency with the power to prosecute any organization that does not fulfill its obligations to children, said the bureau is responsive to ACEs.

Ted Lempert, president of Children Now and a former state legislator, said that the failure to support children is no longer a personal tragedy. "It’s a public tragedy when every child doesn't get support. We need to take a multifaceted approach. We have a lot of power because people care about kids."

Lempert emphasized that messaging is important, and we should keep it simple. "For kids, or not for kids?" is one suggestion. He cited the success the LGBT coalition achieved when it changed its message from gay rights to equality of marriage.

Ross agreed that we need to frame the ACEs issue in a positive way, and Cloutier suggested that perhaps at the next ACEs summit we might focus on language.

All panelists agreed that collective action was needed to move the movement. "This is not silo advocacy as usual," said Ross.

"Let's be bold," added Lempert, "and do what the other groups, like the Chamber of Commerce, do. The key to collective action is getting silos to unite, to share credit, and engage in hard work together."

Newman pointed out that a collaborative approach might result in fewer but more powerful legislative bills getting passed with less work required.

Putting a brake on too much enthusiasm, Ross described one hazard: ‘the curse of the fix.’ "It's not a vaccine," he said. He recommended we focus on just three things we want to achieve, and Lempert said maternal health support should be one of those goals.

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This was a wonderful conference with a depth and diversity of speakers and presentations, truly reflecting the growing national movement of ACE's.  Many thanks to the Center for Youth Wellness, Nadine Burke-Harris, and her team for organizing this conference. It was an honor to participate and to be invited to showcase a documentary film on the subject of secondary trauma and staff resiliency, Portraits of Professional CAREgivers:  Their Passion. Their Pain. (www.caregiversfilm.com)

Please, could we say that "in the past few years, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris has joined Dr. Vincent Felitti and Dr. Robert Anda as 'the major forces' behind the ACEs movement," since Dr. Felitti and Dr. Anda have spent the last 20 years  (and still spend all their waking hours) making speeches on ACEs around the globe?  NB: I sent a message to the conference last week via Jane Stevens: "Nadine Burke Harris for President in 2020!"  A pediatrician in the field, with stage presence; such a campaign alone would change America forever.

Last edited by Kathy Brous
Matt Furlong posted:

I got tired of waiting for our professional community to act on ACES and Trauma Informed Care, so I went out on my own.  The need for support is huge, but one person at a time can make a difference.  It is simple....Be the Change.  The world has lost empathy compassion and elements that make communities strong.  Be supportive to those in stress.  Volunteer for community service, but be balanced to provide for your immediate circle fairly. If all the man hours the United States has put into ACEs and Trauma Informed Care was spent in Volunteer and Community strengthening supports, we would be seeing better results.  Being informed is great, but if that is all the further you get, that is sad for all of us!

Hi Matt! Boy, am I ever down with your first sentence! I don't know which community you're referring to - but where I live, in Mt. Shasta, CA, located in Siskiyou County (right up against the Oregon border)...we are one of the largest (in land mass), least populated and poorest counties in CA. Our population centers (none of which are very populous!) are also very spread out across the county, making coordinating events and resources even more challenging.

About six months ago I attended an ACEs presentation - the facilitator was from several counties further South - and at the end of the training, when asked by the facilitator "How are you going to use this material in your job/setting/home?" - I commented that after about four decades of attending human services trainings, I'm tired of things playing out in this way: we leave the trainings feeling inspired and invigorated and are SURE we're going to implement the information we've just been given...

But in my experience, by two weeks or a month later, the training is a distant memory. Most people are so busy running on their particular hampster-wheel of job and life responsibilities, they simply aren't able to follow up on the 'information dumps' they periodically experience...because they don't get the follow-up built into their schedules.

That said...

A bit over a week ago I had the great good fortune to be able to attend a two-day conference, NextNOW, put on by ACE Intercept (with the coordination of an amazing group of other organizations).  I almost couldn't believe how well it was organized in such a way as to support ACTION in the Southern OR communities. I'm pretty sure I was the only Californian in attendance, and am I ever glad that I was able to be there! 

My vision is to bring more resources, information about ACEs, and encourage taking ACTIONs such as you suggest. I do volunteer in my community, by spending 20 hours weekly loving kids at one of our many Head Start centers. I've also been studying Early Childhood Education for some years now - how I wish it was taught in high schools - if every parent learned more about it, I think we'd have a lot healthier society...

I feel the same way about ACEs, and to that end I'm planning on getting trained in the ACE Intercept Master Training program. As a semi-retired person I plan to make myself available to anyone or any group that wants to learn how to integrate ACEs knowledge into whatever their particular function in their community is.

I hope the conference you're attending right now is as inspiring as the one I just attended! Good luck in whatever you do...I'm going to include my phone number here in case you or anyone else who wants this movement to spread in communities everywhere wants to work together towards that goal...

Sandy Mitchell

(206) 963-0619

Last edited by Sandy Mitchell

I got tired of waiting for our professional community to act on ACES and Trauma Informed Care, so I went out on my own.  The need for support is huge, but one person at a time can make a difference.  It is simple....Be the Change.  The world has lost empathy compassion and elements that make communities strong.  Be supportive to those in stress.  Volunteer for community service, but be balanced to provide for your immediate circle fairly. If all the man hours the United States has put into ACEs and Trauma Informed Care was spent in Volunteer and Community strengthening supports, we would be seeing better results.  Being informed is great, but if that is all the further you get, that is sad for all of us!

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