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Moving as a child can change who you are as an adult [WashingtonPost.com]

 

My wife and I recently packed our 2-year-old twins into their car seats and moved them halfway across the country to a new home in Minnesota. During the five or so days we spent on the road with them, we had ample opportunity to reflect on what sorts of terrible harms we were inflicting on their fragile little toddler brains.

Did they understand what was going on? Would they like the new place when they got there? Were we destroying their chances of ever getting into Harvard by letting them watch eight hours of garbage cartoons in the back seat of a Honda CR-V, day in, day out?

As it turns out, a study recently published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicinehas some answers to those questions. British researcher Roger Webb and his colleagues took advantage of an amazingly complete data set — containing records on literally every single person born in Denmark between 1971 and 1997 — to investigate how moving in childhood affected outcomes later in life.



[For more of this story, written by Christopher Ingraham, go to https://www.washingtonpost.com...you-are-as-an-adult/]

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Some time ago, I found myself wondering why I couldn't calculate an accurate number of the times in which I'd been "homeless"-during my lifetime. I'd lived my first three years of life in the same town as the following twelve years, but I had to travel by school bus [7 miles] through 3 towns to where I attended Kindergarten, then I had 1st and 2nd grade in a [2 classroom] schoolhouse less than 1 mile from my home, then 3rd-10th grades approximately 7 miles away (in the same town/village as my kindergarten), as the school district boundaries in that part of the state didn't all match the town boundaries.... My first "homeless" experience occurred in my senior year of High School, on the "School-to-Prison pipeline": I "couch-surfed" for two months, before I got my own apartment two months before I graduated from my senior year in high school.

If US Census data had all the information the Danish data contained in this study, what might we also be able to learn about ACEs, and what if any added criteria the World Health Organization's current ACE International Questionaire might avail us.

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