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July 2019

New Study Supports Positive Effects of $15 Hour Minimum Wage [irle.berkeley.edu]

The recent Congressional Hearing on Preventing Childhood Trauma included a robust dialogue about the correlation between poverty, trauma and ACEs (time stamp 2:49). Panelists were asked what policies could positively impact income as a means to prevent and mitigate the effects of trauma and ACEs. Raising the minimum wage was not discussed. The following press release, describing new research from the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment , supports it as an effective strategy , one...

How private sector tools can enhance governmental cooperation [brookings.edu]

By Stuart Butler, Brookings, July 12, 2019. In many areas of domestic policy, effective solutions to a problem typically need the coordination of different government programs and agencies. For instance, achieving good health in a community requires not just good medical care, but also attention to transportation, housing conditions and other “social determinants” of health. Collaboration and coordination across agencies and programs is no easy matter at any level of government. For one...

Young People are Using Musical Theater to Heal Their Trauma — and it's Working [nationswell.com]

By Monica Humphries, Nation Swell, July 12, 2019. On the drive home from Priya Shah’s first Storycatchers musical, she pulled over to cry. Shah, who now serves as the executive director of Storycatchers, had just seen a musical at the Illinois Youth Center, a juvenile detention center in Warrenville, Illinois. She watched girls tell stories of sexual abuse, battery and neglect. She also saw stories of hope and resilience. “It struck me that these characters I had just watched struggle, joke,...

How to improve health outcomes for Indigenous peoples by making space for self-determination [theconversation.com]

By Dominic O'Sullivan, The Conversation, July 10, 2019. Indigenous public policy fails consistently. The research evidence is compelling . Across post-settler colonial societies like New Zealand, Australia and Canada, schooling is not as effective for Indigenous citizens, employment and housing outcomes are not as good, and health outcomes are worse. In Canada, the government says the solution lies in stronger nation-to-nation relationships between the state and First Nations . In Australia,...

Health Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence

You can listen to About Health, on KPFA.org, 94.1FM, hosted by me (Rona Renner, RN) Listen Here: https://www.nurserona.com/health-consequences-of-intimate-partner-violence/ or here: https://kpfa.org/player/?audio=314353 I was honored today to be joined by Dr. Brigid McCaw and Michiko Scott to discuss Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). I was moved by Michiko's courage to talk about her own experience with IPV. As an IPV survivor she overcame various challenges as an immigrant single mother of...

SEL in the House: Democrats Approve Millions in Landmark Federal Funding for Social-Emotional Learning in Bill That Now Faces Test in Senate

In what’s been described as a landmark investment from the federal government in social-emotional learning, the House of Representatives approved a spending bill last month that included $260 million in funding for what it calls “whole child” initiatives within the Department of Education. The funding is divided into four areas : 1. $170 million through the Education Innovation and Research program to provide grants for evidence-based innovations that support students’ social, emotional and...

What I learned after spending four years chronicling the impact of trauma on one woman’s life [centerforhealthjournalism.org]

By Marisa Kwiatkowski, USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism. How do you know when someone is emotionally ready to be interviewed about a trauma he or she has experienced? What do you do if she wants to back out just before publication? How do you respond to a source’s complex family dynamic when it is affecting the reporting process? How do you protect yourself from becoming emotionally entangled in a story? While producing a five-part series, “ Ashley’s Story ,” published in April in...

Mental Health and Self-care: When You Can’t Give Your All to Your Work [blogs.psychcentral.com]

By Jenna Grace, PsychCentral, June 13, 2019. In my over 20 years of working, I’ve learned that, when it comes to your mental health, pushing yourself just isn’t worth it. Sometimes you can’t be your best. And sometimes your work suffers. My husband and I are moving into our first house this week. Well, our first purchased house. Which means we’ve been packing our current rental and getting our new house ready to move into. Which saves little time for much else. And while I’m lucky to have...

Personal stories from witnesses, U.S. representatives provided an emotional wallop to House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing on childhood trauma

Room erupts in applause for the grandmother of witness William Kellibrew during July 11 House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing. The power of personal stories from witnesses and committee members fueled the July 11 hearing on childhood trauma in the House Oversight and Reform Committee* throughout the nearly four hours of often emotional and searing testimony and member questions and statements (Click here for 3:47 hour video). The hearing was organized into a two panels—testimony from...

Family Trauma Institute

Don't miss out on this opportunity to gain valuable knowledge from Dr. Scott Sells who is one of the leading experts in the field on treating Family Trauma. Please register today as there is a limited number of spots available for tomorrow's free webinar. Click on the link to register . Together, we can make a difference! Find us on Facebook .

Rethinking Resilience: A Review of Change your World

Change Your World is the newest addition to the body of resources on Resilience. It has been written by Michael Ungar, PhD - one of the most informed voices in resilience research. Although the reviewer was skeptical leading up to reading the book, expecting more victim blaming, which is often the predominant theme of resilience promotion, she was pleasantly surprised. She now recommends this book to everyone interested in learning how to build a healthier humanity.

White Fragility - A Self-Reflection

While working through the book My Grandmother's Hands by Resmaa Menakem, I recorded my thoughts and questions about White Fragility and my embodiment of it. I'm still cleansing from centuries of trauma from my own ancestors, and disrobing from the lies my cells have been steeped in. This is deep work. This record captures my process at one juncture.

Can Cities Build Their Way to Housing Equity? A New Book Suggests Not [psmag.com]

By Roshan Abraham, Pacific Standard, July 8, 2019. Solange Knowles, when asked about her song "Cranes in the Sky" by her sister Beyoncé for a 2017 feature in Interview , said the lyrics had been a response to luxury construction in her then-home of Miami. She felt the buildings kept ascending, without solving the social problems of the world below. Solange told her sister the song was about "this idea of building up, up, up that was going on in our country at the time, all of this excessive...

Why We Must Turn Up the Heat on Tobacco Products [rwjf.org]

By Matt Pierce, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, July 12, 2018. Although smoking rates have dropped by more than half over the past 50-plus years, tobacco use remains the number one cause of preventable deaths in the United States. And not everyone has benefited equally from reduced rates in smoking—there are deep disparities in tobacco use and quit rates, depending on where people live, how much money they make, and the color of their skin. Tobacco products disproportionately harm people...

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