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The toxic stress of racism

On the bus ride to work this morning, I found myself thinking about the extraordinary contributions of the ACEs framework. Soon my thoughts led to the necessary inclusion in this framework, of systemic structures, such as racism and other forms of oppression, as a source of toxic stress. As worthy of an ACEs score point, perhaps.

There is research that shows us that the experience of racism alone can reduce life expectancy. In order to treat individuals with a high ACEs score, it’s critical that the advocacy part of this movement (as Nadine Burke Harris defines it), includes strategic planning to cure structures of their role in providing the doses of racism that increase the overall load of toxic stress.

These thoughts turned into a blog post upon reading this sad, sad story of Kalief Browder, who committed suicide after being released from a long-term, morally reprehensible if not actually unconstitutional incarceration as a teen, for a crime for which he was never tried.

As a recently retrieved research paper he wrote indicates, he himself recognized that the onset of his mental health struggles were a direct result of surviving the brutal physical and psychological trauma while he was incarcerated among men, as a boy. The series of structures within systems that landed and trapped Kalief in prison with no trial or conviction, have to be addressed in addition to other sources of ACEs.

This includes identifying ways of treating the impact of racism using a trauma-informed lens- as a source of PTSD. Such a focus might have been the kind of treatment needed to help Kalief survive after release. He had so much wisdom left to share.  


Read the article at the link below to read more about Kalief. The research he wrote about his experiences in Rikers is attached to this blog post.  

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...paper_n_7646492.html

 

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     I know of a person, who, while incarcerated in prison, as a "Youthful Offender" (supposedly, no criminal record), undertook to obtain a particular book, from the publisher, entitled: "Identity: Youth and Crisis" by Eric Erickson, and read the book, ....because he didn't want to leave prison as an "Ex-convict"(with a Contaminated Identity).

     About ten years after he got out of prison, he was taking a college course, which in retrospect it might be fair to say that some of the course content addressed "Relational Brokenness" and "Risking Connection", and he began having some difficulty with it, so his professor referred him to the college counseling office. The Counselor, who was also a VietNam Veteran had said to him: "You were in Attica, I was In VietNam. We both Cheated Death."

     I would assert that "Cheating Death" can require experiencing a form[s] of "Toxic Stress". The 52% of Detroit Metropolitan Area Schoolchildren who met the criteria for PTSD, which an Epidemiologist had noted back in 2000, at a "Grand Rounds Continuing [medical] Education presentation I attended at Dartmouth, may have witnessed shootings, been fearful of gunshots, had hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axes running on "Overdrive", or "Turbo-charged" in the "Motor City". Racism, Classism, Sexism, and other Oppressive "Isms" that serve to "Dehumanize" us, in conjunction with the "Stresses of Poverty", were noted in an english translation of Otto Rene Castillo's poem on Oppression-which I thought was "from a pretty good trauma-informed Lens".

Last edited by Robert Olcott
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