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June 2021

LGBTQ+ Youth: Risks and Resources from Resilient Georgia

LGBTQ+ youth are among the most vulnerable when it comes to mental health at any given point but may be especially so after this past year of turbulence and loss. National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) reports that youth identifying as lesbian, gay, or bisexual are twice as likely to experience symptoms of mental illness compared to their heterosexual peers while transgender and non-binary youth are at a four times greater risk. Further, these children often cannot even begin to address...

Black and Hispanic Americans Suffer Most in Biggest US Decline in Life Expectancy Since WWII [khn.org]

By Liz Szabo, Kaiser Health News, June 24, 2021 Although James Toussaint has never had covid, the pandemic is taking a profound toll on his health. First, the 57-year-old lost his job delivering parts for a New Orleans auto dealership in spring 2020, when the local economy shut down. Then, he fell behind on his rent. Last month, Toussaint was forced out of his apartment when his landlord — who refused to accept federally funded rental assistance — found a loophole in the federal ban on...

Underrepresented Scholars Membership Award [istss.org]

From International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, June 2021 Application Deadline: August 3, 2021, 11:59pm U.S. Central Time Background ISTSS is an international interdisciplinary professional organization that promotes advancement and exchange of knowledge about traumatic stress. This knowledge includes understanding the scope and consequences of traumatic exposure; preventing traumatic events and ameliorating their consequences; and advocating for the field of traumatic stress...

Earth's New Gilded Era [theatlantic.com]

By Vann R. Newkirk II, Photos: Balazs Gardi, The Atlantic, October 15, 2020 C onsider the cantaloupe. It’s a decent melon. If you, like me, are the sort who constantly mixes them up, cantaloupes are the orange ones, and honeydews are green. If you, like me, are old enough to remember vacations, you might have had them along with their cousin, watermelon, at a hotel’s breakfast buffet. Those spreads are not as bad as you remember, especially when it’s hot out; add a couple of cold bagels and...

Online Course For Stress Relief, Emotional Resilience And Mental Health

It seems mental health is (finally!) becoming a household phrase. No longer does it imply that something is wrong or unhealthy. No longer are therapeutic support or mental health tools so hush-hush or drenched in shame. But there’s still work to do. The truth is, we’re just waking up to the fact that we can always be improving our mental health. And it’s an ongoing, worthwhile journey. With the ACE assessment, we can pinpoint the things in our childhood that could be contributing to mental...

New Episode of Transforming Trauma: Trauma-Informed Law and Storytelling with Marjorie Florestal

Transforming Trauma episode 045: Trauma-Informed Law and Storytelling with Marjorie Florestal On this episode of Transforming Trauma , our host Sarah Buino is joined by Marjorie Florestal. Marjorie is a trauma-informed law professor, storyteller, and fiction writer. Marjorie trained in the NeuroAffective Relational Model (NARM) and shares how she is incorporating her understanding of complex trauma and NARM into her work as a law professor. Throughout the episode, Sarah and Marjorie discuss...

Setting a Ground Zero Research Agenda for Preventing Black Youth Suicide [jamanetwork.com]

By Arielle H. Sheftall and Adam Bryant Miller, JAMA Pediatrics, June 28, 2021 In December 2019, the Congressional Black Caucus released “Ring the Alarm: The Crisis of Black Youth Suicide in America,” which called for attention to rising rates of suicide and suicidal behavior among Black youth in the United States. Indeed, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggest suicide for Black youth, 5 to 17 years, has changed over the past decade. In 2008, suicide was the...

The Trauma-Focused CBT and Family Acceptance Project: An Integrated Framework for Children and Youth [psychiatrictimesc.om]

By Judith A. Cohen and Caitlin Ryan, Psychiatric Times, June 25, 2021 Sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth experience the same types of traumas as their non-SGM peers, including child maltreatment, domestic and community violence, accidents, traumatic death, and separation. SGM youth are also at elevated risk for stressors common among minorities. Furthermore, these youth experience distinct ongoing stress related to discriminatory societal, medical, educational, housing, employment and/or...

Opinion: Growing up in the foster care system, my pain, my scars and my needs became invisible [sandiegouniontribune.com]

By Vanessa Davis, The San Diego Union-Tribune, June 25, 2021 There’s such a powerful interconnected relationship between two of my life challenges that I question which emerged first in my life: the foster care system or mental health challenges. These two things haven’t played out separately for me. Instead, they are interwoven and further compounded by the everyday reality and stressors of life. To spread healing within our communities, I believe it’s important for people to go beyond what...

Making every school a health-promoting school [thelancet.com]

By Susan M. Sawyer, Monika Raniti, and Ruth Aston, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, June 25, 2021 In the past year, the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on schools has reinforced the profound links between children's health, wellbeing, and learning. In addition to deleterious effects on student engagement, learning outcomes, and educational transitions, there is growing evidence of the impact of school closures on children's and adolescents' emotional distress and mental health.1...

COVID-19's Lasting Effects on Brain and Mind [chcf.org]

By Heather Tirado Gilligan, California Health Care Foundation, June 28, 2021 COVID-19 remains a mysterious illness, a respiratory infection that also affects many organs, including the brain. Researchers from Stanford University, in a study that examined the brains of people who died from COVID-19, have discovered that the illness may have a profound effect on that organ. The researchers compared the brains of 12 people who had COVID-19 to the brains of 12 who did not die of that infection.

We need to celebrate LGBTQ joy this Pride Month. Lives depend on it. [usatoday.com]

By David Oliver, Illustration: Colin Smith, USA TODAY LIFE, June 8, 2021 Imagine your high school baseball team banning you from playing. Your local DMV barring you from changing the name on your driver's license. Your neighbors darting their eyes away from you in public. The transgender community faces hardships like these on a daily basis – not to mention a wave of discriminatory legislation. Trans people are like Sisyphus, forever barreling a boulder up a never-ending hill. But what if...

Pineapple Bowls

It was a beautiful, warm and sunny Juneteenth in the City of Oakland. Around Lake Merritt, people were listening to music, riding off-road vehicles, having a drink, smoking a little weed...enjoying life. I was there soaking up the sun while celebrating the end of chattel slavery with my friends John and Juan “Swamp.” After an afternoon of talking about everything from adversity to political ideology to healing-centered interventions, we meandered through the food sellers strewn alongside the...

Dr. Gabor Maté talks with experts about the therapeutic use of psychedelics for trauma

Mention the “love drug” Ecstasy and it conjures up images of young people at rave parties on the beach. But MDMA, the chemical compound better known as Ecstasy, is now gaining credibility as a potential treatment for severe trauma. The promise of MDMA (known to scientists as 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) as a therapeutic treatment was part of a conversation between Dr. Gabor Maté and pioneers in the field who are researching the synthetic drug to treat the painful manifestations of...

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