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July 2021

Emotional Wellness

There can be no doubt that emotional wellness and emotional intelligence go hand in hand. But what does it mean to be emotionally well? Is it something mysterious and unattainable? Or is it something that anyone can achieve? This article will explore these questions and discuss how emotional wellness appears and how the lives of emotionally well people appear. Definitions are a Good Place to Begin The National Center for Emotional Wellness is an organization committed to fostering emotional...

Report: Preventing Gun Violence With a Public Health Approach [aecf.org]

By The Annie E. Casey Foundation, July 20, 2021 Public health strategies in Atlanta and Milwaukee have prevented gun homicides over the past several years, according to a new report by the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Often referred to as community-based violence interventions, the safety approaches implemented in the two cities involve examining the root causes of conflicts, interrupting situations likely to result in shootings and promoting community-wide healing. The report, Improving...

Overpolicing erodes communities, yet research on new strategies is mixed [centerforhealthjournalism.org]

By Andrea McDaniels, Center for Health Journalism, July 23, 2021 In communities of color across the country, aggressive overpolicing is eroding the health of residents who live in a constant state of fear. Some worry about a possible bad encounter with law enforcement, while others live with the traumatic memories of already having experienced one. This kind of policing environment, often targeted at people who have done nothing illegal, is leading to chronic stress that puts wear and tear...

Why You Should Stop Yelling at Your Kids [nytimes.com]

By Stephen Marche, The New York Times, September 5, 2018 The use of spanking to discipline children has been in decline for 50 years. But yelling? Almost everybody still yells at their kids sometimes, even the parents who know it doesn’t work. Yelling may be the most widespread parental stupidity around today. Households with regular shouting incidents tend to have children with lower self-esteem and higher rates of depression. A 2014 study in The Journal of Child Development demonstrated...

Why are Black children removed from homes at high rate? L.A. County plans 'blind removal' pilot [latimes.com]

By Jaclyn Cosgrove, Los Angeles Times, July 14, 2021 America’s largest child welfare system will soon test whether race, ethnicity or neighborhood can influence social workers’ decisions to remove children from their homes. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to support a pilot project that tests “blind removal,” first tried in Nassau County, N.Y. Social workers typically have access to an array of information, including a family’s race, when making the difficult...

Funding opportunity: Promoting Resilience and Mental Health Among Health Professional Workforce [hrsa.gov]

Funding opportunity : Promoting Resilience and Mental Health Among Health Professional Workforce HRSA total funding: $29M / 10 awardees / multiple year Application Deadline: 8/30/2021 Description : The purpose of this program is to provide support to entities providing health care, health care providers associations, and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), taking into consideration the needs of rural and medically underserved communities , to establish, enhance, or expand evidence...

2021 - A Big Year In the Literature on Trauma and Developmental Disabilities

If there was ever any doubt that the intellectual and developmental disability (IDD) field is recognizing the critical importance of trauma, three brand new articles in the academic literature published in 2021 have put that to rest. They are all scoping reviews which summarize the professional literature on a particular topic and attempt to synthesize the current state of knowledge. It was rather stunning that, in the same year that these articles were published, the Traumatic Stress...

Black America's Neglected Origin Stories [theatlantic.com]

By Annette Gordon-Reed, The Atlantic, June 2021 W hen i was growing up in Conroe, Texas, about 40 miles north of Houston, my classmates and I took Texas history twice, in the fourth and seventh grades. We learned about Texas’s history in the United States, its previous existence as a republic, and its time as a province of Mexico. Among other things, we were exhorted to “remember the Alamo” and “remember Goliad,” famous events in Texas’s fight for independence from Mexico. Some other aspects...

Communities in Schools of New Mexico gives hope to families in pandemic era [santafenewmexican.com]

By Kelly Pope, Santa Fe New Mexican, July 25, 2021 I am honored to know of and tell the remarkable pandemic story of Communities in Schools of New Mexico and how this group provided hope and resilience to countless families over the unprecedented last 18 months. Since 2015, I have watched and admired the deep commitment Communities in Schools has to the local community. They help students through a variety of methods of support, ensuring no one falls through the cracks and that each...

Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse Struggle To Find Treatment [npr.org]

By Rachel Rock, National Public Radio, July 26, 2021 Male victims of sexual trauma face a lot of obstacles to getting help. They have trouble finding people to believe their stories, even when they find the strength to seek assistance. ARI SHAPIRO, HOST: The CDC estimates that 1 in 6 men have been sexually victimized at some point. It's a largely silent epidemic despite revelations of abuse by Catholic priests and Boy Scout leaders. Not confronting this issue only makes recovery harder.

Teen Mental Health - Resilient Georgia General Meeting

Resilient Georgia is excited to share information and resources from our June General Meeting on Teen Mental Health , where we brought together experts and advocates in the Georgia behavioral health space to discuss their work around adolescent well-being. Teenagers can be hard to decipher at times, but one point is clear: teens need large amounts of support to overcome the staggering odds of having mental illness. With rates of teen mental illness already higher than the adult population...

Simone Biles, ACEs and PCEs [positiveexperience.org/blog]

By the HOPE Team, 7/28/21, positiveexperience.org/blog Like so many people, we spent part of the weekend transfixed by the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Despite COVID, no crowds, and troubles with the Tokyo organizing committee, the athletes dazzled us with their speed, endurance and grace. In particular, Simone Biles seems superhuman – a woman who seems to defy gravity and performs gymnastic feats that had been thought to be impossible. She wears her past on her body and outfit: her collarbone bears...

New Episode of Transforming Trauma: Bringing Trauma Awareness to Coaching Volleyball with Kathy Nielson

Transforming Trauma Episode 048: Bringing Trauma Awareness to Coaching Volleyball with Kathy Nielson In this episode of Transforming Trauma , we are joined by Kathy Nielson. Kathy recently completed the Level 1 NARM Online Basics Training and is now a NARM-Informed Professional. Kathy shares about her multifaceted involvement in her community of North Minneapolis. This is a community full of connection and engagement, a multiracial community where 84% of residents are people of color, but...

Santa Barbara County Given $2.5 Million Grant to Implement Re-entry Program for Incarcerated People [noozhawk.com]

By Jade Martinez-Pogue, Noozhawk, July 22, 2021 Santa Barbara County is one of two agencies in California to receive a nearly $2.5 million Pathway Home Grant from the U.S. Department of Labor to implement a re-entry program, providing 250 justice-involved individuals the services that will help them secure employment opportunities before their release from the jail system. The Santa Barbara County Workforce Development Board , the Sheriff’s Department , Allan Hancock College and Santa...

Author Talks About The History Of Black Equestrian Erasure [npr.org]

By Alisa Chang, Justine Kenin, and Jason Fuller, National Public Radio, July 26, 2021 NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Katherine Mooney, author of the book Race Horse Men: How Slavery and Freedom Were Made at the Racetrack , about the erasure of African-Americans in the equestrian world. AILSA CHANG, HOST: "Teen-Aged Girl Cracks Barrier On Race Track" - that was the headline on Jet Magazine 50 years ago this month. And while that teen, Cheryl White, was the first African American girl to become...

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