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Screening Mental Health In Kindergarten Is Way Too Late, Experts Say [NPR.org]

 

When it comes to children's brains, Rahil Briggs describes them as ... sticky.

"Whatever we throw, [it] sticks. That's why they can learn Spanish in six months when it takes us six years," says the New York City based child psychologist, "but also why if they're exposed to community violence, or domestic violence, it really sticks."

Briggs works at the Healthy Steps program at the Montefiore Comprehensive Health Care Center in the South Bronx, screening children as young as 6 months for mental health issues.

That may sound young, too young maybe, but that's when some experts believe it's important to catch the first signs that something may be wrong. Many say waiting until kindergarten is too late.



[For more of this story, written by Kavitha Cardoza, go to http://www.npr.org/sections/ed...too-late-experts-say]

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If the statistics At Lincoln Hospital are nearly as similar to the ones I saw in the early 1970's, while visiting the Southeast Bronx, it may be helpful to use the World Health Organization's ACE International Questionaire. 85% of the housing in the Southeast Bronx was 'substandard' or 'deteriorated', and most banks "Red-Lined" the area for mortgages (except Harlem Savings Bank). Lincoln's Emergency Room had 186,000 patients that year-including gunshot victims as young as eight years old-that I know of.

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