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The Federal Budget is a Statement of Our Values. Thanks to You, It's Beginning to Look More Trauma-Informed.

The Campaign for Trauma-Informed Policy and Practice (CTIPP) reflects on progress made in the recently-passed Fiscal Year 2022 budget and the fight ahead in FY23. Congress passes appropriations legislation annually to fund the federal government, including federal agencies and their programs for businesses and local governments. Each year, funding levels are subject to change: while new programs begin and others grow, some shrink or are cut altogether. CTIPP is working toward a society that...

New Transforming Trauma Episode: Community-Based and Trauma-Informed Tribal Court with Judge Abby Abinati

On this episode of Transforming Trauma, our host Emily is joined by Judge Abby Abinati. Judge Abby is the Chief Judge of the Yurok Tribe, which is the largest surviving Native American Tribe in the state of California. Judge Abby shares about what she and her people have learned directly about cultural and intergenerational trauma, and how this trauma-informed understanding provides the context for her work within her community. Judge Abby presides over what is called a wellness court, which...

PHC6534: Educational Intervention on the Compounding Effects of Stigma on Mental Health and ACEs in Hispanic Communities

Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been linked to mental health illnesses such as anxiety and depression. In Hispanic culture, mental illness is largely stigmatized which greatly affects individuals from seeking the help they need. This further perpetuates mental illnesses due to ACEs. Miami-Dade County has a large Hispanic population that experiences high levels of poverty. Miami Dade has high rates of violence, domestic and gun violence which are factors that contribute to ACEs. To...

ACEs Screening & Psychosocial Support for Afghan Refugees in the U.S. through Trauma-Informed and Cultural-Sensitivity Approaches

Refugees around the world are particularly vulnerable to various forms of trauma and toxic stress — from persecution in their home country, process of transport, to resettling to their host-country. The same is true for more than 75,000 Afghan refugees in the United States who have been displaced after the Taliban return to power in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic last year (Wang & Rodriguez-Delgado, 2022). Thus, considering the cumulative experiences of threat and stress of Afghan...

Join the national conversation to help end toxic polarization. Register today for America Talks and connect one-on-one, or in a small group.

In the spirit of community and bridge building, PACEs Connection is partnering for the second year with America Talks 2022 , and invites YOU to participate! America Talks (April 21 & 23) invites Americans of all backgrounds and beliefs to connect one-on-one or in small groups, face-to-face on video (like zoom). The event begins with a livestream that will welcome you and thousands of other Americans to the next phase of the bridging movement and will provide you all you need to know to...

How the NBA got serious about mental health [washingtonpost.com]

By Michael Lee, Photo: Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images, The Washington Post, April 19, 2022 For DeMar DeRozan to have a season that was once part of his childhood imagination, he had to first be honest as an adult about what was going on in his head. Career years don’t often arrive for 32-year-olds at the tail end of their prime, but DeRozan credits his renaissance in Chicago to the freedom created once he helped shatter the facade of the invincible athlete. Freedom that can be found in tattoos...

Some Care Workers Are Seeing a Bump in Pay. They’re Working to Make It Last. [nytimes.com]

By Emma Goldberg, Photo: Gili Benita/The New York Times, The New York Times, April 16, 2022 Sandra Rosales’s voice takes on an affectionate lilt when she recalls the notes she received from the two girls she used to care for in Brooklyn. “If I had to describe you in one word it would be loving,” one of her nanny charges, now 9, wrote to Ms. Rosales last year. “Thanks for encouraging me to be brave.” Ms. Rosales spent six years with them, working 10 hours a day and five days a week. They were...

Hartford arts organization adds therapy, techniques to address childhood trauma [courant.com]

By Seamus McAvoy, Photo: Hartford Courant, Hartford Courant, April 16, 2022 Charter Oak Cultural Center, a Hartford arts education organization, is using therapy and mindfulness to tackle childhood trauma. The center, located in Connecticut’s first synagogue, is now an “ACEs Aware” institution — one that formally recognizes the lasting effects of trauma and adverse childhood experiences, also called ACEs. It’s also partnering with 2AssureUs LLC, a Hartford therapy practice that serves...

‘Birthing while Black’ is a national crisis for the US. Here’s what Black lawmakers want to do about it [theguardian.com]

By Edwin Rios, Photo: Bryan Dozier/Rex/Shutterstock, The Guardian, April 19, 2022 W hen Alma Adams’s daughter complained of abdominal pain during a difficult pregnancy, her doctor overlooked her cries for help. The North Carolina congresswoman’s daughter had to undergo a last-minute caesarean section. She and her baby daughter, now 16, survived. “It could have gone another way. I could have been a mother who was grieving her daughter and granddaughter,” Adams told the Guardian, following a...

Young playwrights confront gun violence with their art and say #Enough [npr.org]

By Jeff Lunden, Image: #Enough, National Public Radio, April 17, 2022 Wednesday marks the 23rd anniversary of the Columbine school shootings. Across the country, theaters and civic organizations are commemorating this event by presenting readings of eight short plays by teenagers. The program is called #Enough : Plays to End Gun Violence. Director Michael Cotey was in rehearsal on February 14, 2018, when the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland , Fla., occurred. "This...

FREE WEBINAR: How to Engage the Extended Family in Trauma Treatment

It takes a village to raise a child (an old African proverb). This means that a child needs both the immediate and extended family to overcome adverse traumatic experiences to heal long term. Unfortunately, traditional trauma treatment often only includes the individual child. And if you do mobilize, the extended family, you are often unsure what their role is or how to actively incorporate them into trauma treatment. DATE: Wednesday, June 29 TIME: 12 - 1 pm EST COST: Free with REGISTRATION...

Check out these Educator Events and Resources!

Learn! Connect! Discover! Friends, it's time for a good ol’ resource share out. There are so many excellent opportunities coming up in the next few months, from PACEs Connection and beyond, both no-cost and paid. I know we are tired…but these are too good not to check out! I invite you to add things I have missed in the comment section. Events PACEs Connection Virtual Trauma-Informed Schools Summer Leadership Institute June 21-24 https://www.pacesconnection.co...leadership-institute Join us...

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