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You've been screened for ACEs...NOW WHAT?

 

California recently enacted the ACEs Equity Act to expand health insurance coverage for Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) screening.

This is excellent news, as it'll allow more people to get screened for ACEs, the root cause of the toxic stress responsible for serious, costly health challenges and even death.

Once screened, people will have a better understanding of where their toxic stress comes from so they can begin seeking evidence-based care.

If you've been screened for ACEs, what's next?

True Sage was developed with a remarkable advisor, Dr. Vincent Felitti, the Co-Principal Investigator of the CDC-Kaiser Permanente Adverse Childhood Experiences Study, as the prescribed follow-up methodology after patients get their ACE score. It was used with the study’s original participants in the 1980s and we’ve been refining it ever since.

True Sage programs are clinically proven and endorsed by Dr. Felitti himself as a treatment solution for ACEs. They are available to individuals and can also be delivered as a package to supplement corporate wellness initiatives. To find the best True Sage program for yourself, your loved ones, your clients, or your patients, click here.

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"If you've been screened for ACEs, what's next?"

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I cannot afford to have a formal diagnosis made on my condition, due to having to pay for a specialized shrink, in our (Canada's) β€œuniversal” health-care system. Within our β€œuniversal” health-care system, there are important health treatments that are unaffordable thus universally inaccessible, except for those with generous health-insurance coverage and/or a lot of extra doe.

Furthermore, Canada is the only country with "universal" health-care coverage that fails to also cover medication. Not surprising, a late-2019 Angus Reid study found that, over the previous year, due to medication unaffordability, almost a quarter of Canadians decided against filling a prescription or having one renewed. Not only is medication less affordable, but other research has revealed that many low-income outpatients who cannot afford to fill their prescriptions end up back in the hospital system as a result, therefore costing far more for provincial and federal government health ministries than if the medication had been covered. ...

Also, I don't believe it's just coincidental that the only two health professions’ appointments for which Canadians are fully covered by the public plan are the two readily pharmaceutical-prescribing psychiatry and general practitioner health professions? Such non-Big-Pharma-benefiting health specialists as counsellors, therapists and naturopaths (etcetera) are not covered a red cent.

Nonetheless, my experience has revealed to me that high-scoring adverse childhood experience trauma that essentially results from a highly sensitive introverted existence notably exacerbated by an accompanying autism spectrum disorder, can readily lead an adolescent to a substance-abuse/self-medicating disorder, including through eating. It’s what I consider to be a perfect-storm-of-'train-wrecks' condition with which I greatly struggle(d), yet of which I was not aware until I was a half-century old. ... If people have their ACEs, etcetera, diagnosed when very young, they should be better abled to deal with their condition through life.

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