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April 2022

Early Relational Health Summit: Joining Hands to Promote Foundational Relationships for Every Child

WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2022 THE PALACE AT SOMERSET PARK 333 DAVIDSON AVENUE FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP, NJ 08873 Click here to register Join us at the 2022 Early Relational Health (ERH) Summit to hear from national experts and learn how foundational relationships between young children and their caregivers impact physical health, child development, social well-being, and resilience. This summit is designed to bring together forward-thinking pediatric healthcare professionals, early childcare providers,...

Seeking Volunteer Evaluators for the Spring/Summer 2022 Request for Proposals (RFPs)

Greetings, The Chicago Department of Public Health, Office of Violence Prevention and Behavioral Health (OVPBH) is seeking volunteer evaluators for upcoming (Spring/Summer 2022) Request for Proposal (RFP) opportunities where we call for proposals from organizations to fund their violence prevention initiatives. Our team-based approach ensures that all RFP applications are thoughtfully considered using a transparent scoring criterion. All potential evaluators will be screened for conflicts of...

New Transforming Trauma Episode: Trauma and Beyond with Drs. Joanne Barron and Lynne Friedman-Gell

On this episode of Transforming Trauma, our host Emily is joined by Drs. Joanne Barron and Lynne Friedman-Gell. Drs. Joanne and Lynne have been studying and integrating NARM into their work since 2012. Together they have developed an integrative approach for trauma treatment incorporating mind, body and emotion in which NARM plays a big role. They are also Co-Founders of the Trauma and Beyond Psychological Center, an intensive specialized treatment program which provides day-treatment and...

New York Lawyers Acknowledge Child Welfare’s Harsh Impact on Black Families, Call for Changes [imprintnews.org]

By Megan Conn and Michael Fitzgerald, Photo: Hiram Alejandro Durán, The Imprint, April 4, 2022 T he bar association representing tens of thousands of New York attorneys has taken a first-ever stance against racism in the child welfare system, endorsing specific calls for change that include revising decades-old federal laws. The New York State Bar Association resolution , approved Saturday, acknowledges the harms the American child welfare system has visited disproportionately on Black...

Ukrainian refugees find jobs, kindness, as they settle in [apnews.com]

By Monika Scislowska and Stephen McGrath, Photo: Stephen McGrath/AP Photo, Associated Press, April 4, 2022 Nataliya Hibska quickly brushes her teeth and makes the bed. She is rushing to her new job. From a small hostel room in eastern Warsaw, Hibska, a Ukrainian refugee, is slowly rebuilding her life, which was abruptly upended by Russia’s invasion of her homeland. European Union member nations like Poland and Romania — the two neighboring countries to have received the most refugees from...

What If Fox News Viewers Watched CNN Instead? [bloomberg.com]

By Matthew Yglesias, Photo: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg, Bloomberg Opinion, April 3, 2022 The establishment of Fox News in the late 1990s forever changed both media and politics in America, transforming the formerly staid world of television news into the series of political shoutfests we know and love-hate today. More than a quarter-century after its founding, however, the question persists: Does watching Fox News actually change voters’ minds? It’s worth noting that, in a famous study published...

Many Teens Report Emotional and Physical Abuse by Parents During Lockdown [nytimes.com]

By Ellen Barry, Photo: Kim Raff/The New York Times, The New York Times, March 31, 2022 New research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on adolescents’ mental health during the coronavirus pandemic suggests that for many teenagers who were ordered to stay at home, home was not always a safe place. A nationwide survey of 7,705 high school students conducted in the first half of 2021 built on earlier findings of high levels of emotional distress, with 44.2 percent describing...

A historic all-Black town wants reparations to rebuild as a ‘safe haven’ [washingtonpost.com]

By Emmanuel Felton, Photo: Joshua Lott/The Washington Post, The Washington Post, April 1, 2022 If you really concentrate, you can imagine the town that this community’s elders describe. There was the grocery store on the highway, and the gas station. There were the shops where children walked to buy lunch for 50 cents on school days. There was Ms. Sadie’s chicken shack and Dr. Minor’s office. All of that’s gone now. In their place, either vacant lots or dilapidated buildings. Today, you’re...

Change and the Trauma Informed Lens: Know Better, Do Better

When the trauma Informed lens is in place, you will inevitably see that change is needed in your organization. The 'change' could be to practice, or process, or maybe wholesale culture change - but there will be change. The impacts (positive and negative) will impact in a parallel process. It should be felt by 'those we serve', 'those we employ' and modeled/felt by leadership. A TIC/ACE/PACE based foundation is exactly what organizations need in order to develop a healthy, thriving workplace...

PACEs Research Corner — April 2022

[Editor's note: Dr. Harise Stein at Stanford University edits a web site — abuseresearch.info — that focuses on the effects of abuse, and includes research articles on PACEs. Every month, she posts the summaries of the abstracts and links to research articles that address only ACEs, PCEs and PACEs. Thank you, Harise!! — Jane Stevens] Child Abuse Vermeulen S, Alink LRA, van Berkel SR. Child Maltreatment During School and Childcare Closure Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Child Maltreat. 2022 Feb...

PACEs champion Rebeccah Ndung’u launches trauma-informed schools in Kenya

Growing up as the eldest daughter in a family of three girls and three boys in Nairobi, Kenya, Becky Ndung’u and all her siblings attended school, which is mandatory for children ages six through 14. Her parents—both farmers and her father also a lifelong government accountant—were committed to providing all their children a good education. Her education began in a public school, followed by a private high school. Our conversation was conducted in English, but Ndung’u is also fluent in her...

A Private War: Why PTSD Is Still Overlooked [nytimes.com]

By Dani Blum, Illustration: Debora Cheyenne Cruchon, The New York Times, April 4, 2022 Nancy Méndez-Booth was diagnosed with PTSD after she delivered a stillborn baby in the winter of 2008. Within an hour after she rushed to the hospital, in labor and exhilarated, a doctor told her that the baby she had spent years planning for had no heartbeat. When she returned home from the hospital, Ms. Méndez-Booth said she felt as though she had “arrived from Mars”; she got lost in her own apartment...

Children’s book aims to combat stigma, uplift children with incarcerated parents [jjie.org]

By Renee Menart, Photo: Rob Marmion/Shutterstock, Juvenile Justice Information Exchange, April 1, 2022 Children’s books centered on characters involved in the justice system can support kids with incarcerated parents and offer a compassionate window into this experience for broad young audiences. Incarceration is harmful not only to people held in confinement but to the health of their children , who, for example, may experience post-traumatic stress from witnessing a parent’s arrest or...

Suspensions, Expulsions or Arrests of Students at School. There’s Still Time to Fix That [the74million.org]

By Richard Mendel, Photo: Getty Images, The 74, March 29, 2022 T he COVID-19 pandemic has been a nightmare for teenagers. The U.S. surgeon general and the American Academy of Pediatrics recently declared a nationwide adolescent mental health crisis, as did the president of the United States . Academic achievement tests show wholesale learning loss. School attendance has plummeted. And these difficulties are being felt most among students who were already behind before COVID — youth of color,...

California once prohibited Native American fire practices. Now, it's asking tribes to use them to help prevent wildfires [cnn.com]

By Alaa Elassar, Photo: Don Hankins, CNN US, April 3, 2022 California is calling upon Native American tribes to bring back the once-prohibited practice of lighting controlled burns to help prevent devastating wildfires that have wreaked havoc on the state . Gov. Gavin Newsom's Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force has launched a new plan -- "Strategic Plan for Expanding the Use of Beneficial Fire" -- that relies on the help of Native Americans to revive their cultural burning practices,...

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