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Register for Children’s Health in Focus: The Profound Effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences

 

Please join Children's Health in Focus president and CEO Arturo Brito on Thursday, February 23 at 2pm ET for a conversation with national experts about the effects of ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences) on the physical and mental health of children, as well as ways they can be prevented and mitigated.

Join Dr. Jeffrey Holzberg, Director of Clinical Research, and Early Childhood Advocate with Chiricahua Community Health Centers, Inc. and Dave Ellis, a nationally recognized expert on Adverse Childhood Experiences.

Register: https://bit.ly/3DbfYB0

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Even if the abuse is survived, resultant emotional and/or psychological trauma can nonetheless act as a starting point into a life in which the brain uncontrollably releases potentially damaging levels of inflammation-promoting stress hormones and chemicals, even in non-stressful daily routines.

It's like a form of non-physical-impact brain damage.

It has been described as a continuous, discomforting anticipation of ‘the other shoe dropping’ and simultaneously being scared of how badly you will deal with the upsetting event, which usually never transpires.

The lasting emotional/psychological pain from such trauma is very formidable yet invisibly confined to inside one's head. It is solitarily suffered, unlike an openly visible physical disability or condition, which tends to elicit sympathy/empathy from others.

Sadly, due to the common OIIIMOBY mindset (Only If It’s In My Own Back Yard), the prevailing collective attitude, however implicit or subconscious, basically follows: ‘Why should I care — my kids are alright?’ or ‘What is in it for me, the taxpayer, if I support programs for other people’s troubled children?’

As a moral rule, a physically-/mentally-sound future definitely must be every child’s fundamental right, especially when considering the very troubled world into which they never asked to enter.

The wellbeing of all children — and not just what other parents’ children might/will cost us as future criminals or costly cases of government care, etcetera — should be of great importance to us all, regardless of whether we’re doing a great job with our own developing children.

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