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Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study: Beyond Screening in Pediatrics

 

The evidence is clear. When bad things happen to us as young children, we are at significantly increased risk for not only mental health problems, but also a wide range of physical health problems including asthma, heart disease, and even early death. These "bad things" all involve disruptions in caregiving relationships. A national movement directed at screening for ACEs in pediatric practices has emerged from this work.

My suggestion that the implication of the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study is orders of magnitude greater than screening was met by spontaneous applause at two presentations I gave at the recent Zero to Three annual conference in San Diego.

If poor health outcome is directly proportional to experiences that adversely impact relationships, the natural conclusion is that promoting healthy parent-child relationships from birth must be the core of children's health care.

An entire new field, termed infant-parent mental health, infant mental health or early childhood mental health, has emerged out of the wealth of scientific knowledge at the interface of genetics, neuroscience, and developmental psychology to inform a model of prevention, early intervention and treatment. My most recent book, The Developmental Science of Early Childhood synthesizes this work into a practical guide to its application from infancy through adolescence. Efforts at "co-location" point in the right direction. However, it is the pediatric specialist who should be co-located. The clinician whose primary task is to promote healthy relationships should be the primary care provider.

What would such a restructuring look like?  Clinician training that places this body of knowledge at the center, rather than as elective, would be a start. Structure reimbursement so that the clinicians on the front lines, in essence saving lives by spending time listening to parents and children, would be financially rewarded. We would draw the most talented clinicians from the more lucrative subspecialties to the work of primary prevention. 

The original ACE research grew out of the observed high association between adult obesity and childhood sexual abuse. The original ACE questionnaires address experiences specific to relationships. Recent adaptations have expanded to include external stressors such as poverty and racism. Looking to the research of Ed Tronick (credit image below,) we can understand the parent-infant relationship as being either a buffer against or a transducer of these stressors.

Healthcare clinicians cannot solve problems of poverty and racism. But we are ideally situated to use our relationship with families to build buffering relationships.

Decades ago John Bowlby, influenced by Charles Darwin, observed that safe, secure caregiving relationships are central to our evolutionary success. Now abundant scientific research supports this observation. We need an army of clinicians whose primary objective, drawing on contemporary developmental science, is to promote healthy relationships from birth. I hope the powerful driving force of the ACE study, exemplified by advance praise of Nadine Burke Harris' forthcoming book on the subject, will move us beyond screening to deeper long-term solutions. 

Note: Originally published on my Child In Mind blog.

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Barbara Burns posted:

I want to highly recommend Dr. Gold's book which is a compelling summary of the science that everyone who works with children needs to know and be able to explain to others.  Dr. Gold is able to translate relevant science to the real world of educators, practitioners and families! Brava to Dr. Gold!

As part of our 501c3  SAFE,SECURE AND LOVED, we are working to provide parent education programs for families of young children which are mindfulness-based, trauma-informed AND community-led. Right now we are working primarily in San Jose but we have been training community leaders across the USA. Help us extend our reach and check out our program-    http://www.safe-secure-and-loved.com

Hi Barbara

Thank you for your kind comment. Your program looks terrific!

best

Claudia

Hi Jane, Great question--as part of this program parents don't complete an
ACEs questionnaire and we don't explicitly go over the science of ACEs.
One of our weeks is focused on protecting the brain of your
baby/toddler/child and the focus is on impacts of violence and other
stressors on development. I have partnered with a pediatric group who
referred participants with high ACE scores to us.
I have been considering it -- Thx for reading about us! best, Barb


*Barbara M. Burns, Ph.D.*

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On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 11:50 AM, ACEsConnection <
communitymanager@acesconnection.com> wrote:

I want to highly recommend Dr. Gold's book which is a compelling summary of the science that everyone who works with children needs to know and be able to explain to others.  Dr. Gold is able to translate relevant science to the real world of educators, practitioners and families! Brava to Dr. Gold!

As part of our 501c3  SAFE,SECURE AND LOVED, we are working to provide parent education programs for families of young children which are mindfulness-based, trauma-informed AND community-led. Right now we are working primarily in San Jose but we have been training community leaders across the USA. Help us extend our reach and check out our program-    http://www.safe-secure-and-loved.com

Christine Cissy White posted:
Claudia Gold wrote:
"However I would frame the issue differently from "educating" parents. I think that valuing parents, in the form of paid parental leave, home visiting, quality childcare, and health care that offers opportunity to listen, all have the effect protecting time and space for parents to engage their own natural expertise"

Dr. Gold: 

THIS quote is just about everything I believe and why I don't share parenting education, advice and tips in Parenting with ACEs. Instead, we hope to share stories, experiences and realities.  Parenting advice, without perspective and all you mentioned above, and from people who often have no idea what the barriers and struggles of Parenting (and Peopling with ACEs are) is often insulting, harming and even re-traumatizing - even though that's not the intention. 

If text campaigns gave support or respect, rather than brain-building basics they would be far less likely to be blocked or ignored. I've talked to (and been) a parent who felt harassed by that form of parenting support. 

Thank you for all the work you do WITH parents and to help support parents and parenting! Truly, you are inspiring! There are so many who won't listen to parents and so having those who work with parents speaking and working with us - it's rare and wonderful. Thank you!

Cissy 

Thank you Cissy for your comment. I agree that well intentioned efforts to provide "tips" or "brain-building activities'' can have the unintended effect of undermining parents' agency and authority. Rather than expectation that a "right" way can be "taught," extensive evidence coming from research in the field of infant mental health shows that we develop a sense of agency by working through the inevitable mismatches, or difficult moments, in relationships. 

 

Last edited by Claudia Gold
Claudia Gold wrote:
"However I would frame the issue differently from "educating" parents. I think that valuing parents, in the form of paid parental leave, home visiting, quality childcare, and health care that offers opportunity to listen, all have the effect protecting time and space for parents to engage their own natural expertise"

Dr. Gold: 

THIS quote is just about everything I believe and why I don't share parenting education, advice and tips in Parenting with ACEs. Instead, we hope to share stories, experiences and realities.  Parenting advice, without perspective and all you mentioned above, and from people who often have no idea what the barriers and struggles of Parenting (and Peopling with ACEs are) is often insulting, harming and even re-traumatizing - even though that's not the intention. 

If text campaigns gave support or respect, rather than brain-building basics they would be far less likely to be blocked or ignored. I've talked to (and been) a parent who felt harassed by that form of parenting support. 

Thank you for all the work you do WITH parents and to help support parents and parenting! Truly, you are inspiring! There are so many who won't listen to parents and so having those who work with parents speaking and working with us - it's rare and wonderful. Thank you!

Cissy 

Excellent article. I would suggest we also include family physicians, of which I am one, in this discussion. We care for patients from birth to death, and everything in between. Unfortunately, as a specialty the family physicians are woefully behind on ACEs work, but many are individually taking up this work. My hope is that these individuals will move this work forward so it is eventually accepted as part and parcel of family medicine, as it should be.  I am working in Pennsylvania to share the information and various ideas for prevention and treatment. 

Family Medicine, as a specialty is predicated on the idea that relationships are key to health, both mental and physical.  In my career I have very frequently directly cared for two generations of a family and occasionally cared for three and four generations.  Knowing the generations gives great insight into the family stories, customs, habits and interactions. 

I applaud the pediatrics community, and especially Nadine Burke-Harris, MD for leading the way in this work. As she has said, we all hope that one day we will sheepishly look at our grandchildren and say, yes, once we did not know that ACEs were important and to be prevented. 

David Dooley posted:

Hear, Hear to "deeper long term solutions"!!!

"My suggestion that the implication of the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study is orders of magnitude greater than screening was met by spontaneous applause at two presentations I gave at the recent Zero to Three annual conference in San Diego."

The above doesn't surprise me in the least.  I believe the greatest takeaway from the ACE Study, and the one that is being overlooked, is that parenting education will prevent adverse childhood experiences!

and

"If poor health outcome is directly proportional to experiences that adversely impact relationships, the natural conclusion is that promoting healthy parent-child relationships from birth must be the core of children's health care."

I couldn't agree more, and proactive, passive/public parenting education ought to be central.

Hi David

Thank you for your comment. I agree with your ideas about investing resources in parents. However I would frame the issue differently from "educating" parents. I think that valuing parents, in the form of paid parental leave, home visiting, quality childcare, and health care that offers opportunity to listen, all have the effect protecting time and space for parents to engage their own natural expertise 

Hear, Hear to "deeper long term solutions"!!!

"My suggestion that the implication of the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study is orders of magnitude greater than screening was met by spontaneous applause at two presentations I gave at the recent Zero to Three annual conference in San Diego."

The above doesn't surprise me in the least.  I believe the greatest takeaway from the ACE Study, and the one that is being overlooked, is that parenting education will prevent adverse childhood experiences!

and

"If poor health outcome is directly proportional to experiences that adversely impact relationships, the natural conclusion is that promoting healthy parent-child relationships from birth must be the core of children's health care."

I couldn't agree more, and proactive, passive/public parenting education ought to be central.

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