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March 2016

How Your Early Childhood Affects Your Path Forward [FastCoexist.com]

Clinicians use a common tool to assess the extent of toxic stress a child has experienced during his or her childhood. It’s called the Adverse Childhood Experience test, or ACE for short. It's a simple tool made up of just 10 yes or no questions. The lower the score, the better. In a meta study conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Kaiser Permanente, researchers tracked the health outcomes of adults based on the extent of the adverse experiences they dealt with...

PAPER TIGERS Educational Version Now Available on DVD or Digital Streaming!

From Tugg.com, March 17, 2016 Tugg Edu is proud to present the highly anticipated ACEs documentary PAPER TIGERS to the educational marketplace. Directed by James Redford ( THE BIG PICTURE: RETHINKING DYSLEXIA, RESILIENCE ), PAPER TIGERS follows a year in the life of an alternative high school that has radically changed its approach to disciplining its students, becoming a promising model for how to break the cycles of poverty, violence and disease that affect families. With over 450...

Police Brutality and the Mentally Ill

Most of us don’t have interactions with the police. For those of us who are minorities, we have reason to be fearful. While my oldest son was going to school in Arizona, he was stopped twice for what we teasing tell him was “Driving While Indian (DWI).” There was no reason to stop him other than his brown face. And as a young paperboy who reported someone climbing into a window in the early morning, then waited for the police to arrive, I had my first negative experience. As I sat in the...

Refugees Suffer a Higher Rate of Psychotic Disorders [ScientificAmerican.com]

Immigration policy played a decisive role in the outcomes of three regional elections in Germany this past Sunday. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party in particular, the Christian Democratic Union, suffered losses attributed to its leader’s welcoming stance toward refugees fleeing war in Syria, Iraq and other war-torn regions. Germany took in more than a million migrants and refugees in 2015—more than any other country in Europe. But taking each nation’s population into consideration, Germany...

Midlife Friendship Key To A Longer, Healthier Life [NPR.org]

[Photo by Felipe Bastos/Flickr] People between 45 and 65 may be the loneliest segment in the U.S. And researchers are using brain scans to show that friendships are vital to staying healthy and engaged in your middle years. RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST: At some point, most people feel lonely. But according to some surveys, the middle years are the loneliest period of life. Feeling isolated is also dangerous and it can be fatal. As journalist Barbara Bradley Hagerty found for our series on midlife,...

Medical students, burnout and alcohol [ChicagoTribune.com]

[Photo by jasleen_kaur/Flickr] Medical students are more prone to alcohol abuse than their peers not attending medical school, especially if they are young, single and under a high debt load. That's according to a study on medical student burnout by researchers at Mayo Clinic. The findings appear in the journal Academic Medicine. "Our findings clearly show there is reason for concern," says Liselotte Dyrbye, M.D., Mayo Clinic internist and senior author of the paper. "We recommend...

Maternal Mental Health Spotlight: Tracking Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) An interview with Jennifer Weeks

By: Elizabeth Fitzgerald Clinical Supervisor, LPC Deschutes County a nd Jennifer Weeks, Maternal Mental Health Specialist Jennifer Weeks works as a bi-lingual, behavioral health and trauma specialist embedded within the WIC clinic at Deschutes County Health Services. In less than two years, she has served more than 400 women who may not have otherwise sought care due to the stigmas and fears associated with new mothers seeking mental health services. Prior to joining Deschutes County...

Maternal and Child Health Journal Call for Papers: The ACE Study: Implications for MCH Policy and Practice

Findings of the ACE Study have had a swift and substantial impact on MCH policy, practice and research. This issue of the journal is intended to provide a forum to enhance knowledge of the Study and its implications across the field. Topics of interest include: The aims and findings of the ACE Study, The implications of the Study and use of Study findings to shape MCH practice in clinical, program and policy settings, The import of the Study in relation to life course theory and the social...

MARC Advisor: Linda Chamberlain, PhD, MPH

Linda Chamberlain is an epidemiologist, author, professor, dog musher and founder of the Alaska Family Violence Project. She is also a translator, determined to bring the “aha” moments of brain science and trauma to everyone in compelling and relevant ways. That might mean posters about ACEs hung in outhouses in a rural Alaska community. “We have to be really flexible on how we define training and education,” she says. “It can be a conversation at church…We have to meet people where they are...

How do early adverse situations affect child development? [ABQJournal.com]

Q: When infants and toddlers see violence in the home, are abused or experience other adverse situations early on in their young lives, how do they do later on in the school setting? Do they have difficulties as early as kindergarten? A: I wonder about this every time I hear about an unfortunate situation in the news and it is casually mentioned that there are other young children in the home. Those young children mentioned “in the background” live in homes where they perhaps see domestic...

The ‘Diplomas Now’ Way: Better Identify At-Risk Kids, Do Whatever It Takes to Get Them to Graduation Day [The74Million.com]

Researcher Robert Balfanz says by ninth grade, he can identify 75% of the kids who will drop out from high school. That’s when a team of nonprofits rushes in to help (San Antonio, Texas) — First period was just about to start, and Angel Mendoza was already asleep at his desk. He’s often tired at school after working late-night shifts in the kitchen at Alamo Pizza, but he needs the money and the busy schedule keeps him out of trouble. “Honestly, sometimes I don’t even do my homework,” said...

Are We Properly Dealing With Young Sex Offenders? [PSMag.com]

Sex offenses against minors don't always feature deviant adults preying on children; kids themselves can also be the perpetrators. Young adolescents account for roughly half of all cases of sex offenses against younger children; one out of every eight of young offenders are under the age of 12. But it wasn't until the latter half of the 20th century that researchers began paying attention to juvenile sex offenders, when research revealed that up to one-third of adult offenders began...

The San Francisco Jail That Started a School [Medium.com]

I t’s the first day of class for Child Development 123: Learning Disabilities, and instructor Sylvia Buford, PhD, is laying down some rules. “I do children’s disabilities. I don’t do adult meltdowns,” she says. “If there’s a problem” — she points at her desk — “I will have to use that radio” to summon help. Her students, more than a dozen women dressed in the orange sweatshirts and sweatpants worn by inmates of San Francisco County Jail Number 2 near downtown San Francisco, listen quietly as...

How Journaling Can Benefit You If You’re Depressed [Blogs.PsychCentral.com]

Introduction Are you feeling depressed? Are you sleeping less than normal or sleeping more than usual? Is your appetite increased or decreased? Are you feeling hopeless? These are all signs of depression. If you feel this way, have you ever considered journaling as a coping mechanism to handle these symptoms associated with depression. You may ask why is journaling a good coping mechanism to use to handle the symptoms associated with depression. This article will describe just this. For...

How Postpartum Depression is Different from Baby Blues [PsychCentral.com]

Today, even though we’ve made much progress, postpartum depression (PPD) still gets confused with baby blues. It still gets minimized and dismissed. Oh, don’t worry. Being sad and sobbing are totally normal. So is feeling frustrated. You just gave birth, after all. You just need some sleep. A day off. A change in attitude. Maybe you should stop putting so much pressure on yourself. Maybe you’re not used to being home so much. You need time to adjust. You need to get used to your new normal.

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