Skip to main content

Blog

Professor honored for trauma work [winonapost.com]

By Alexandra Retter, Winona Post, July 8, 2020 Childhood is a formative period, and the experiences one has during it resonate throughout one’s life. One local professor has been helping to share information about the impacts of trauma during childhood on adult life, and she was recently honored for her work with an award. Winona State University social work professor Ruth Charles recently received the 2020 Champion for Children Award from Minnesota Communities Caring for Children (MCCC, or...

How the COVID-19 Pandemic is Highlighting the Importance of Trauma-Informed Care: Q&A with Dr. Edward Machtinger [chcs.org]

By Meryl Schulman and Emma Opthof, Center for Health Care Strategies, Inc., July 7, 2020 COVID-19 and the stressors it is placing on individuals’ physical, emotional, and financial wellbeing create a new imperative for health care systems to look to trauma-informed care to support both patients and frontline workers. To learn more about how health care providers are using trauma-informed approaches to care in the current environment, the Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS) recently...

Adverse Childhood Communication Experiences Associated With an Increased Risk of Chronic Diseases in Adults Who Are Deaf [ajpmonline.org]

By Poorna Kushalnagar, Claire Ryan, and Raylene Paludnevicience, American Journal of Preventive Medicine, July 4, 2020 Introduction This study explores adverse childhood communication experiences and its RRs for acquiring specific chronic diseases and mental health disorders in adults who are deaf and hard of hearing. Methods A cross-sectional design with snowball sampling was used to recruit adults who were deaf and hard of hearing and were born or became deaf in both ears before age 13...

'When Someone Hires Me, They Get the Boss Herself' [nytimes.com]

By Michaela Haas, The New York Times, July 7, 2020 Maria Carmen Tapia has learned a host of new skills in the last few months. The 42-year-old housekeeper and all her colleagues at the housekeeping app Up & Go were trained by Occupational Safety and Health Administration-authorized trainers, learning to put on protective gear correctly and establish safety protocols to keep themselves and their clients safe during the pandemic. At first glance, Up & Go resembles any other...

Minnesota 'crisis mode chaplains' seek to heal trauma of George Floyd's death [startribune.com]

By Jean Hopfensperger, The Star Tribune, July 6, 2020 Kelly Sherman-Conroy felt the anguish on the streets following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, concluding that people were aching for more than food and emergency relief. So the Lutheran leader and Native American activist posted an appeal on Facebook for "clergy, spiritual leaders and mental health leaders who would like to serve as volunteer chaplains." More than 100 faith leaders have stepped forward,...

What Most People Don't Know About Trauma and Addiction [psychologytoday.com]

By Jason N. Linder, Psychology Today, July 6, 2020 If you are like most people, you may think addiction is a rampant problem in our society. And you're partially right. It is. But that misses the forest for the trees. It's not the root problem itself. It's actually a failed solution to the underlying problem: the pandemic of unhealed, psychological trauma . It’s essential to realize that addiction is often the symptom of the problem in reality . It's no coincidence that about 28 percent of...

How States Are Incorporating Health into the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit [housingmatters.urban.org]

By Marc Shi, Abigail Baum, and Craig E. Pollack, Housing Matters, July 2020 In recent years, housing has emerged as one of the most talked about and researched social determinants of health. Several decades of research examining the impact of hazards like lead paint, asbestos, and mold on children’s health have highlighted the connection of housing quality to health in communities across the US. And housing’s impact on health has broadened from a focus solely on quality to include housing...

'Every Work of American Literature Is About Race': Writers on How We Got Here [nytimes.com]

By Lauren Christensen, The New York Times, June 30, 2020 Almost 100 years ago, responding to the public outcry over the violent drowning of a Black boy by a white mob at a public beach on Lake Michigan, a citywide (multiracial but white-led) commission published “The Negro in Chicago: A Study of Race Relations and a Race Riot.” “Centuries of the Negro slave trade and of slavery as an institution … placed a stamp upon the relations of the two races which it will require many years to erase,”...

On Racism: A New Standard For Publishing On Racial Health Inequities [healthaffairs.org]

By Rhea W. Boyd, Edwin G. Lindo, Lachelle D. Weeks, Monica R. McLemore, Health Affairs, July 2, 2020 Racism is, perhaps, America’s earliest tradition. Its practice pre-dates the founding of the nation, as settler colonialism and Indigenous genocide powered the land theft that established the United States. And enslaved humans were the capital that generated this stolen land’s economy. In spite of centuries of legal advancements that endeavored to excise racism from the roots of this...

A Better Normal- Education Upended, Special Guest Pamela Black

Welcome Back! We hope everyone had a restful holiday. Please join us tomorrow, Thursday July 9th as we host special guest Pamela Black to discuss a back to school survey that aims to gather information from staff regarding what they need to feel safe in their return to school. Weekly themes include: How do we create physical and psychological safety, especially in the face of so much uncertainty? What strategies can we use to create a culture of collective care? How do we implement peer...

Shame Resilience: A Critical Component to Anti-Racist Work

In a recent episode of the podcast Unlocking Us, Brené Brown discusses the power of shame and how it is not an effective tool for social justice. She goes on to explain that shame is in fact real pain that is defined as the “intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love, belonging, and connection.” It is in fact so powerful that when we experience shame, it triggers a fight, flight or freeze response. She identifies shame as a tool of...

Green, Yellow, Orange Or Red? This New Tool Shows COVID-19 Risk In Your County [npr.org]

By Allison Aubrey and Carmel Wroth, National Public Radio, July 1, 2020 How severe is the spread of COVID-19 in your community? If you're confused, you're not alone. Though state and local dashboards provide lots of numbers, from case counts to deaths, it's often unclear how to interpret them — and hard to compare them to other places. "There hasn't been a unified, national approach to communicating risk, says Danielle Allen , a professor and director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics...

New episode of Transforming Trauma! Compassion Prison Project: Bringing Trauma-informed Care into the Prison System with Fritzi Horstman

Transforming Trauma Episode 017: Compassion Prison Project: Bringing Trauma-informed Care into the Prison System with Fritzi Horstman In this episode of Transforming Trauma, our host Sarah Buino is joined by Fritzi Horstman, Founder and Executive Director of the Compassion Prison Project . Through her work, Fritzi aims to bring trauma-informed care to a population in high need of trauma healing and not likely to receive it: men and women in prison. Sarah and Fritzi discuss Adverse Childhood...

Self-Care in Small Moments

Self-care does not have to look like it does in the magazines. Self-care can be improvised, it can be momentary, it can be “catch-as-catch-can.” And that’s okay. It’s actually great! Why? Because it means self-care is actually possible.

How Childhood Physical and Emotional Neglect Lead to Adult Substance Abuse

People who went through the trauma of physical or emotional neglect as children have higher rates of depression, anxiety, or anger issues. Also, the responses to these negative emotions that have their roots in childhood abuse are to act impulsively. This impulsiveness may include drinking or taking drugs as a way to numb those uncomfortable feelings. [1] Childhood Abuse and Physical Impacts on the Brain When we take a look at why this impulsiveness develops, some research indicates that it...

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