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November 2017

Initiative underway to educate communities on impact of adverse childhood experiences on developing brains [baltimoresun.com]

Child advocates are launching a statewide initiative Wednesday to educate communities about the impact of trauma on developing brains and its correlation with poor health outcomes. The Family Tree, a nonprofit that works to prevent childhood abuse and neglect, is helping to train professionals across sectors — from child care and the judicial system to churches and law enforcement — on the the effects on the body and brain of physical abuse, neglect, domestic violence and parents who are...

1 Thing No One Tells You About Life After Trauma [cosmopolitan.com]

Two little words have taken social media by storm: Me Too. A campaign started by activist Tarana Burke and made viral by actor Alyssa Milano, the Me Too movement gave voice, through stories and shares, to countless survivors of sexual violence. At least part of the reason for the collective impact of Me Too was that there did not seem to be a lot of parsing about whether one bad experience was worse than another, or whether one industry or individual had more of a right to speak. Rather, a...

Latino kids face more early obstacles, but there are solutions that work [nbcnews.com]

About eight-in-ten Latino children face at least one difficult childhood experience and have fewer resources for nutrition, exercise and early childhood learning, especially pre-K, according to a report by Salud America! at UT Health San Antonio. These early roadblocks affect future health and personal development, but researchers say there are solutions that work. The study, released Tuesday is “a comprehensive research review on what is the current state of early Latino childhood...

Millions of Youth Are Homeless for More Than Month At a Time, New Study Finds [jjie.org]

WASHINGTON — Nearly one in 30 teens and one in 10 young adults experienced homelessness in the past year, a groundbreaking new study has found. Researchers at the University of Chicago’s Chapin Hall interviewed more than 26,000 people from all over the country over the past year. They found that 4.3 percent of youths 13 to 17 years old reported at least one instance of homelessness; nearly 10 percent of young adults 18 to 25 years old had experienced homelessness. The study, “Missed...

The Power Of #MeToo: Why Hashtag Sparks ‘Groundswell’ Of Sharing — And Healing [khn.org]

As a Ph.D. candidate in the social sciences more than 20 years ago, Duana Welch, 49, had done enough research to know the consequences she’d face by reporting sexual harassment in the workplace. “When women came forward with allegations of sexual abuse and sexual harassment, the woman was the person blamed and the woman was not believed,” she said. “I was very angry that I would pay the price for coming forward. I knew what would happen.” Like most who’ve had similar experiences, Welch, a...

Childhood trauma: The kids are not alright and part of the explanation may be linked to epigenetics [geneticliteracyproject.org]

Kids are resilient. Kids bounce back. Tell that to Dave Brethauer , a performance coach in Chicago, who told Genetic Literacy Project that he spent the better part of his adult life “fighting to find” himself following the trauma he experienced as a child. “From the time I was five till 14 I had an abusive stepdad in my life,” he said. To cope, he found himself turning to alcohol, sex, overeating, and exercise addictions – anything to steer his mind away from the memories and pain that...

How to Teach Gratitude to Tweens and Teens [greatergood.berkeley.edu]

You can’t teach gratitude practices in a vacuum—especially to teens. As a former high school teacher, I can imagine eyes rolling and arms crossing during a lecture on the value of an attitude of gratitude. Simply asking students to share three things they are grateful for might also trigger understandable resistance. Teens tend to respond more positively to lessons and activities that help them understand themselves and connect with peers—and this is what researcher Giacomo Bono and his team...

Why 116,000 Black Women Are Walking Throughout the U.S. [yesmagazine.org]

It all began with two friends taking walks together in the streets of Los Angles in the late 1990s, but now it’s a nationwide movement that has more than 100,000 Black women walking for wellness and social justice. “GirlTrek was just me and Morgan holding ourselves accountable and supporting each other in sisterhood and love,” says co-founder Vanessa Garrison about how she and co-founder Tanya Morgan Dixon met in college and bonded over shared beliefs in radical acts of self-care. The...

Community leaders calling for churches to help address opioid epidemic [timesnews.net]

As the opioid epidemic continues to plague the region, some community leaders are asking the faith community to help solve the problem. To help build the alliance between clinicians, educators and the church, community and faith leaders gathered at Northeast State Community College on Tuesday to announce the Holy Friendship Summit, a two-day event that will create a long-term vision for beating the opioid crisis. “The name is important, Holy Friendship Summit,” said Lottie Ryans, director of...

Wisconsin Dept of Health Services — Trauma-Informed Care News & Notes (Nov. 13, 2017)

Thank you, @Scott A Webb, at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, for putting this together and letting us share it. ACEs, Adversity's Impact Childhood spankings can lead to adult mental health problems Unemployment triggers increase in child neglect, according to new research Neighborhood's quality influences children's behaviors through teens, study suggests Brain and Biology Scientists identify mechanism that helps us inhibit unwanted thoughts Bullying First...

What Happens When a "Behaviorist" has Dinner with a "Trauma-Informist"

Let me tell you, dinner with a behaviorist is an experience, a somatic experience. Lily (name changed to protect her ;-) ) and I shared Indian food two nights ago in Keene, NH. As I shuffled into the restaurant ten minutes late (typical me), I rounded the corner and saw her sitting at a table for two. I beamed; I knew I was in for some rich discussion and a total "nerding out" session. Lily and I are former colleagues. We worked together for only a year, but it was my first year in a new...

The Moral Fabric of Cities [theatlantic.com]

For those monitoring the headlines, the Age of Morality hardly seems a likely title historians will use for the current period. But look closer—in the world’s neighborhood, workplace, or school—and what’s there are countless honest exchanges resting upon mutual trust. “We are all moral code writers,” writes Michael Ignatieff in his new book, The Ordinary Virtues . Ignatieff, a writer, politician, academic, ex-journalist, and former head of Canada’s Liberal Party , has turned his restless...

Adoption Advocates Bank on a New Way to Address Childhood Trauma [chronicleofsocialchange.org]

According to a coalition of adoption advocates, broader acceptance of an emerging mental health diagnosis has the potential to help traumatized children access the help they need. That’s the goal of the End Childhood Trauma Tour , which stops in five cities this week in the name of promoting awareness of the disruptive effects of trauma on children. The tour started in Minneapolis on Friday before stopping in Chicago. It heads to Boston tonight before moving on to Philadelphia and...

Exercise increases brain size, new research finds [sciencedaily.com]

Aerobic exercise can improve memory function and maintain brain health as we age, a new Australian-led study has found. In a first of its kind international collaboration, researchers from Australia's National Institute of Complementary Medicine at Western Sydney University and the Division of Psychology and Mental Health at the University of Manchester in the UK examined the effects of aerobic exercise on a region of the brain called the hippocampus, which is critical for memory and other...

Get free books for survivors

This is a call to all who serve, advocate for, help, support, treat and generally have the backs of survivors of sexual abuse. First, thanks. Thanks even more than I can say. You warm my ole’ survivors heart with all the work you do, all the time you spend trying to address and end this epidemic. I’m pleased as punch that so many of you even exist in the world. How many of you are there? Has anyone counted THAT number? We’ve got the CDC numbers of survivors – last time I checked there were...

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