Skip to main content

August 2018

Handle with Care

Thought you all might be interested in this model of trauma informed response to children going through incidents involving law enforcement being implemented in West Virginia. If a law enforcement officer encounters a child during a call, that child’s name and three words, HANDLE WITH CARE , are forwarded to the school/child care agency before the school bell rings the next day. The school implements individual, class and whole school trauma-sensitive curricula so that traumatized children...

In Baltimore, The Gap Between White And Black Homeownership Persists [npr.org]

Devan Southerland knows she wants to purchase a home in Baltimore City. She is cautious, though, after hearing about how predatory lenders disproportionately targeted minority homebuyers a decade ago. "I just want to be smart about it," Southerland says. "Because I know a lot of black people suffered during the whole housing crisis and whole subprime lending issue that happened a few years ago." In the historic Baltimore neighborhood of Bolton Hill, Southerland and her 10-year-old son, Liam,...

It's Hard to Manage Your Credit When You've Never Heard of 'Interest' [pewtrusts.org]

When Kentucky state Treasurer Allison Ball and a colleague talked with high school seniors last year about credit cards and other pieces of the personal finance puzzle, something wasn’t right. “We kept using the word ‘interest’ and we kept getting blank stares,” Ball recalled. Finally, she asked the students who knew what interest is. No one did. “Here they were, about to be adults, two weeks before graduation — and they had no idea about interest on credit card payments,” said Ball, a...

Children are highly vulnerable to health risks of a changing climate [sciencedaily.com]

Young children are far more vulnerable to climate-related disasters and the onus is on adults to provide the protection and care that children need. In a paper published in PLoS Medicine, researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and Columbia University Irving Medical Center set out some specific challenges associated with the impacts of climate change on the world's 2.3 billion children and suggest ways to address their under-prioritized needs. "Children and...

Inside a Pedestrian-First ‘Superblock’ [citylab.com]

Excess traffic, unmitigated pollution, a lack of green space: These problems aren’t unique to Barcelona. But the city’s answer is. Superblocks—40-acre, tic-tac-toe sections of the street grid that the city has transformed into pedestrian-first environments—have shot the Catalonian capital to the cutting edge of urban design since Mayor Ada Colau took office in 2015. Drawing inspiration from the city’s historic plan, Colau centered her transportation policy platform around wide-scale...

Once Its Greatest Foes, Doctors Are Embracing Single-Payer [khn.org]

When the American Medical Association — one of the nation’s most powerful health care groups — met in Chicago this June, its medical student caucus seized an opportunity for change. Though they had tried for years to advance a resolution calling on the organization to drop its decades-long opposition to single-payer health care, this was the first time it got a full hearing. The debate grew heated — older physicians warned their pay would decrease, calling younger advocates naïve to...

Surviving Myself [nytimes.com]

On HBO’s “ Sharp Objects ,” Amy Adams plays a reporter named Camille, who returns to her hometown, Wind Gap, Mo., to investigate a series of child murders. Camille, a journalist in search of her big break, is also an alcoholic who drives around drinking vodka from Evian bottles, a former hometown It Girl and a cutter . At the end of the first episode, as she sinks into a hot bath, her skin is revealed to be a thicket of scar tissue. The show’s subplot of self-harm casts light upon an often...

Study finds behavioral changes insufficient at preventing early childhood obesity [medicalxpress.com]

Young children and their families in poor communities were able to make some achievable and sustainable behavioral changes during the longest and largest obesity prevention intervention, but, in the end, the results were insufficient to prevent early childhood obesity. The results of the Growing Right Onto Wellness (GROW) trial, released in JAMA, showed a short-term reduction in obesity that diminished over the three-year study period even in the face of improved, sustained nutrition and use...

ACEs | Alcohol's Harm to Others | Secondhand Drinking

It is likely most readers know someone or they are the someone who has personally experienced alcohol's harm to others | secondhand drinking. The tragedy is we hardly talk about it in ways that can change the lives of those affected -- especially the lives of children. In other words, we hardly talk about it in ways that can prevent, intervene, or treat adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). Alcohol’s Harm to Others | Secondhand Drinking and the ACEs Connection One of the 10 ACEs measured in...

Oakland, CA, trying out model used in Baltimore to reduce trauma, increase resilience

Oakland BSC activity: Photo/ Courtesy of Trauma Transformed/East Bay Agency for Children When a group of community organizations in Baltimore came together in 2015, they already knew trauma figured large in many lives. There was violence in the community, in schools, and in community members’ homes. Police brutality occurred. Many suffered the loss of loved ones to incarceration or death. There were house fires and homelessness. Much of the dysfunction was systemic and rooted in racism,...

Wisconsin Dept of Health Services - Trauma-Informed Care News & Notes, Aug. 6, 2018

ACEs, Adversity's Impact ‘First do no harm’. We create too many ACES by moving vulnerable children around like boxes Parents’ adverse childhood experiences and their children’s behavioral health problems Deportation and family separation impact entire communities, researchers say Unspoken: America's Native American Boarding Schools (1 hour - pbs.org) Heitkamp: Bipartisan bill to combat human trafficking in Indian Country (newsmavin.io/indiancountrytoday) Patients' traumatic lives prompt...

Doctors With Disabilities Push For Culture Change In Medicine [npr.org]

Lisa Iezzoni was in medical school at Harvard in the early 1980s when she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. She started experiencing some of the symptoms, including fatigue, but she wasn't letting that get in the way of her goal. Then came the moment she scrubbed in on a surgery and the surgeon told her what he thought of her chances in the field. "He opined that I had no right to go into medicine because I lacked the most important quality in medicine," Iezzoni recalls "And that was...

Behind the Stats: Mark Courtney on His Newest Study on Transition-Age Foster Youth in California [chronicleofsocialchange.org]

Earlier this summer , Mark Courtney and his team at Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago released the latest installment in his most recent longitudinal study, the California Youth Transitions to Adulthood Study (CalYOUTH). Conducted in partnership with the California Department of Social Services and the County Welfare Directors Association of California, CalYOUTH is a five-year research project that examining the impact of California’s implementation of the Fostering Connections to...

Senators Take Aim at Bail Industry Backers [themarshallproject.org]

The mention of “bails bonds” can conjure familiar images: red neon signs glowing near a county jail, or the leather vest, dark sunglasses and blond mane of reality show star Dog the Bounty Hunter. Usually not a skyscraper or office building. But insurance companies form the quiet backbone of the industry, underwriting the vast majority of the millions of bail bonds written each year while undergoing little public scrutiny. [For more on this story by JOSEPH NEFF, go to...

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×