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April 2016

Crucial Concepts in Trauma-Informed Care

In March, the Partner for Healing blog covered several crucial concepts in trauma-informed care. Use any of these posts to start an in-depth discussion with your team! The first post looked at The Primacy of Safe ty. Nothing good can happen when the child does not feel safe. . So how can we create and measure safety? This post includes free sample client and family safety questionnaires. Then we moved on to effective action, in Trauma Steals the Ability to Act- Do We Make It Better or Worse?

New Mexico's Truth: Stunning Vistas And Child Poverty? [NPR.org]

New Mexico offers stunning ski slopes, high desert vistas and cultural sites, all sights you'll see in the state's tourism campaign called " New Mexico True ." But the state also has the highest child poverty rate in the nation — a truth that an advocacy group highlighted with its parody campaign, " New Mexico Truth ." In the original video , you can see footage of children making strands of chili peppers and frolicking at the White Sands National Monument. It's the same image you'll see in...

Denying Housing Over Criminal Record May Be Discrimination, Feds Say [NPR.org]

The Department of Housing and Urban Development is making it easier for people with criminal records to find housing. In new guidance, released Monday, HUD tells landlords and home sellers that turning down tenants or buyers based on their criminal records may violate the Fair Housing Act. Because of widespread racial and ethnic disparities in the U.S. criminal justice system, criminal history-based restrictions on access to housing are likely disproportionately to burden African-Americans...

Kids' Grades Can Suffer When Mom Or Dad Is Depressed [NPR.org]

When parents suffer depression, there can be a ripple effect on children. Kids may become anxious, even sad. There may be behavior problems. Health may suffer. Recently, a large Swedish study showed that grades may decline, too, when a parent is depressed. Using data from 1984 to 1994, researchers from Philadelphia's Dornsife School of Public Health, at Drexel University, measured school grades for more than 1.1 million children in Sweden and compared them with their parents' mental health...

Opinion Piece: April’s the time to prevent childhood trauma (The Register-Guard, Lane Co., OR)

The Register-Guard, a Lane County, OR newspaper, published a guest opinion piece about ACEs and the local H&HS community project to educate and engage. Read it here: http://registerguard.com/rg/opinion/34164805-78/aprils-the-time-to-prevent-childhood-trauma.html.csp The Lane Co. ACEs community project offers free, 45-minute presentations through the end of July 2016. Presentations cover the following topics: ACEs Overview Oregon Brain Science Resilience Strengthening Families :...

Trigger Points to Present Fathering as a Survivor Interview Series

Our intention with the upcoming Fathering as a Survivor interview series is to give male survivors the opportunity to explore the effects childhood abuse has on them now as parents. We want to help fathers educate our society on what their particular triggers and struggles are, as they work to break the cycle of abuse. When we set out to raise awareness on the challenges abuse survivors face as parents, we absolutely intended to address the point of view of mothers and fathers. Hearing from...

White Teachers Expect Less Than Black Teachers From Black Students [TheAtlantic.com]

In yet another sign that the lack of teacher diversity is a pressing issue , a new study suggests that white teachers expect less academic success from black students than black teachers do from the same students. The study , conducted by Johns Hopkins University, found that when a white teacher and a black teacher consider the same black student, the white teacher is 30 percent less likely to think the student will graduate from a four-year college. White teachers, the researchers also...

6 Ways to Start Practicing Self-Compassion — Even If You Believe You’re Undeserving [PsychCentral.com]

For many of us being kind to ourselves is hard. It’s hard even when we’re struggling — and need compassion most. Instead, we get mad. We tell ourselves to buck up. We wonder why we’re so weak. We criticize and hurl insults. We withhold our favorite things — telling ourselves that we don’t deserve to participate in enjoyable activities, because after all, we screwed up everything. But the good news is that we can learn to cultivate self-compassion. Which is vital. Self-compassion helps us to...

Teen Addicts Have Low Appreciation of Others [PsychCentral.com]

Emerging research discovers adolescents with severe alcohol and other drug (AOD) problems have a very low regard for other individuals. Their lack of sensitivity exceeds normal adolescent ego-centric behavior and can compromise proven rehabilitation methods. In the study, developmental psychologist Maria Pagano Ph.D., found adolescents with severe alcohol and other drug (AOD) problems often express their low regard for others by higher rates of driving under the influence and having...

'Childhood Stress' Linked to Serious Cardiovascular Impairment in Adulthood [Inquisitr.com]

A new study conducted by Finland researchers has revealed that early childhood stress could lead to a hardening of arteries or Atherosclerosis in later adult life, a serious condition that can lead to heart attack, stroke, or even death. Researchers employed data on over 300 children and teens aged between 12- to 18-years and calculated their levels of stress based upon a number of indicators. These included their financial circumstances, the emotional health of their family unit, parental...

Health assessment drives solutions [MountainX.com]

A new health assessment for Buncombe County shows an increase in the number of infant deaths, deaths from complications of diabetes and incidences of opiate overdoses. The 2015 Community Health Assessment Report, released last week, also details how to address these and other health problems in the county. The assessment is performed in each county every three years, and hospitals, public health agencies and more than 30 other community partners work to address areas of concern. For example,...

Housing Vouchers, Economic Mobility, and Chicago's Infamous 'Projects' [CityLab.com]

In the 1950s, several high-rise complexes were constructed in Chicago with the seemingly noble aim of creating affordable housing for the city’s poor. But these “projects,” it soon became clear, were more like warehouses than homes, and continued the long tradition of segregating and isolating poor, black Chicagoans in the worst parts of town. By the 1990s, bad design, neglect, and mismanagement had made some of these buildings unlivable. In the Robert Taylor Homes on the South Side, for...

The San Francisco Police Department's Bigotry Problem [TheAtlantic.com]

How many police officers are bigots who patrol their beats, guns on their hips, with animus toward blacks, Hispanics, and other disproportionately abused groups, even as prosecutors, judges, and juries assign unusual credibility to their claims? San Francisco officials were forced to ponder that question last year when an investigation revealed that five veteran cops were texting virulently racist messages to each other. “My office is conducting an immediate assessment of every prosecution...

When Kids Create Their Own Playground [TheAtlantic.com]

Eve Mosher was getting frustrated. Her children, ages 4 and 6, encountered rules everywhere they went to play in New York City. Even at parks and playgrounds, expressly built for the purpose of play, they were chastised for digging in the dirt or climbing trees. Mosher, a native of the Houston suburbs, says that her city kids had “no sense of ownership over a space; there’s no sense of independence and self-confidence that comes from playing on their own.” [For more of this story, written by...

MARC Advisor: Melissa Merrick, PhD

Melissa Merrick gets frustrated with stories of individuals who shine in spite of multiple adversities—the kid from the rough side of town who miraculously makes it to Harvard. “We don’t talk enough about the mentors that kid had, the universal pre-K, all the behind-the-scenes and contextual factors that might have enabled him to thrive,” she says. Melissa hopes the MARC communities and collaborative will help create a new narrative: “that we all have a role in raising children and that my...

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