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Highlights from Maine's first state-wide ACEs summit

 Amaine

The nearly 300 people who gathered at Point Lookout Resort in Northport Nov. 3-4, could avail themselves of this vista, tai chi in the morning, a walk in the woods, and inspiring presentations by Drs. Rob Anda and Ken Ginsburg, both of whom were given standing ovations.

   Anda

As Sue Mackey Andrews, co-facilitator of the Maine Resilience Building Network, says: "Maine is a special place and historically, people work together to conquer adversity on the local level."

Sue Mackey Andrews and Robert Anda

And that is how a grass-roots effort in Maine came to this point. People in the state were early to understand the implications of the ACE Study, and have held many meetings and trainings around the state for several years. But this was the first state-wide meeting.

 

 Mark Rains, early adopter of ACEs who gave a presentation about resilience

In the breakout sessions, people shared how they've been implementing trauma-informed and resilience-building practices in healthcare clinics, schools, youth services and other sectors in the state's communities.  

 

And in the poster session, people oohed and ahhed over the findings of Maine's ACE survey, which most people didn't know had been done. (The poster is attached to this post.)

 

One of the highlights was a screening of Paper Tigersthe documentary that follows students through a year at Lincoln High School in Walla Walla, WA, the first trauma-informed high school in the U.S. It was such a hit that nearly a dozen other communities have or are scheduling screenings.

 

Before they drove off to the far corners of the very large state, the participants talked about next steps...how a community that hadn't implemented trauma-informed practices in its schools could do so, or how a healthcare clinic might start taking ACEs histories. 

 

Maine's communities are already well underway -- 20 cities and towns already have launched ACEs initiatives.    

 

 Ken Ginsburg

Ken Ginsburg

Ann Jennings, a pioneer in trauma-informed practices runs the SPSCOT list serv. She's talking with Louie, Leslie Forstadt's two-month old son.

Sue Mackey Andrews and Leslie Forstadt, co-facilitators Maine Resilience Building Network. Louie's taking a nap.

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Thanks so much, Jane - you captured everything so nicely. This was a great conference - thanks to our partners including The Bingham Program and Quality Counts, as well as others. The Conference created much "buzz" about ACEs, resilience and our Network. Membership has grown by about 45 people since the conference. We are expanding our Resilience Movement across Maine!

 

Now, If we can just get one of those coastal breezes, from "The Ocean", blowing across Maine, into New Hampsha, so that the contractors for our state's BRFSS know what ACEs are...     In 2014, I got called on my cell phone by the N.H. BRFSS contractor's employee[s], and they 'didn't have a clue' what ACEs were, or what the U.S. CDC ACE study was, so I politely declined to participate in the N.H. 2014 BRFSS.

It is good to know that progress is occurring in Maine, and that Vermont's legislature had a bill in the 2013 session (House Bill 762), requiring all Vermont health care providers to screen all patients-regardless of age, for ACEs, ... and that Massachusetts is beginning a statewide trauma-informed school disciplinary policy....

"Lived in New England All Your Life?...Not Yet!"

Last edited by Robert Olcott
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