Skip to main content

PBS documentary -- "Raising of America: Early Childhood and the Future of Our Nation"

“Raising of America: Early Childhood and the Future of Our Nation” is a documentary series planned to run on PBS later this year. It's being screened around the country now. The documentary explores how a strong start for our children can lead to a healthier, stronger, and more equitable America. The project grew out of an earlier award-winning documentary about inequality made by the same organization, California Newsreel, the oldest documentary production and distribution nonprofit in the U.S., along with Vital Pictures in Boston.

Of particular interest to the community of people who are interested in adverse childhood experiences is the fourth episode,  “Wounded Places: Confronting PTSD in America's Shell-Shocked Cities.” The 42-minute documentary can be streamed from the Raising of America site. Earlier episodes are available there as well. “Wounded Places” details the effects of childhood trauma on later life and shows how healing can take place in communities throughout the nation.

Here's the description of "Wounded Places":

Wounded Places travels to Philadelphia and Oakland where a long history of disinvestment and racial exclusion have ravaged entire neighborhoods and exposed children to multiple adverse childhood experiences (or ACEs). We meet families and some remarkable young people who have been traumatized not just by shootings, but fear, uncertainty and a sense of futurelessness.

As Stanford physician Victor Carrion explains, “If we are crossing the street and we see that a truck is coming at us, we can manage that situation, get scared, jump, and move quickly. Unfortunately, many children in our society feel like a truck is coming at them all day long, for more days than not, and this really takes a toll.”

We watch as Caheri GutiÉrrez, Antonio Carter, Javier Arango and other young people wrestle with their hyper-vigilance, sudden rages, nightmares, inability to trust and difficulty concentrating in school. Now they themselves are counseling others, helping them to “own” their trauma. Yet police, teachers, the media, and even social service workers too often make things worse, pegging traumatized children not as injured and in need of healing but as “bad” or “impaired.”

Screenings of "Raising of America" are being held around the country. On the documentary's site, you can also request a screening in your community.

Add Comment

Comments (8)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

The documentary filmakers have made a 42 minute preview available to watch on their vimeo account, you can watch it here .

The preview features among others Victor Carrion MD from The Stanford University School of Medicine Early Life Stress and Pediatric Anxiety Program  

I strongly recommend you set aside 42 minutes and watch it.

Last edited by Leif Cid

A slide showing the current income inequality. It isn't that good because it is comparing the median worth of the top 5 percent of families 3.2 million to the bottom 50 percent 11 thousand, however this is an increase of 290 times which is more significant than any increased risk at ACE score of 6 for suicide 49x or IV drug use 46x.  (I might have these two backwards) but you get my meaning.  

Attachments

What Are the Myths about Witnessing Violence?  (from child witness to violence project).  http://www.childwitnesstoviole...rg/facts--myths.html

  • Myth: The younger the child, the less the child will be affected by exposure to violence.

    Young children are not immune to the effects of violence. Clinical experience suggests that young children are deeply affected by witnessing violence, particularly if the perpetrator or victim of violence is a family member. 

  • Myth: Young children will not remember the violence they have witnessed.

    Children do not forget what they have witnessed. Adults hope that if the violence is not talked about, the children’s memories of the event will disappear. However, young children demonstrate a remarkable capacity for recalling traumatic events. Children’s vivid accounts of violent events stand in contrast to parent’s reports that their children did not see the violence or were unaware of it. 

  • Myth: Violence is an urban problem and only children living in urban areas witness violence.

    Violence is not solely an urban problem. Violence has touched the lives of families and children across the country: in rural areas, in the suburbs and in the inner city. Domestic violence can occur anywhere. Child abuse and community violence occur with more frequency in areas where there is a high concentration of persons with inadequate housing and income, and with high rates of drug use. This correlation speaks to the need for addressing issues of poverty and inequity in this country as one strategy for reducing violence. 

  • Myth: Violence is a racial problem affecting primarily Black and Hispanic children.

    Violence is not a racial problem nor does it exist primarily in minority communities. Domestic violence occurs at similar rates across all races and cultural groups studied. Research suggests that community violence is a function of poverty, not race. When people at the same income level are compared, there are few differences among races. This finding suggests that the context of poverty, not race, is a main risk factor for violence. 

These facts are also related to Jane's Blog: Do ACEs become poverty or is poverty an ACE..  Both are true but poverty is a very pernicious factor that makes everything much harder. I am starting to think that it is also becoming almost impossible to leave severe poverty. 

This documentary was screened at the recent 2015 Child Health, Education, and Care Summit held in Sacramento, California put on by First 5 California among other sponsors.  Although still rough as the final color editing/sound/etc. had not been completed, it is a good eye-opener for the general public about adverse childhood experiences and the related issues we care about.

 

I believe that the film is being produced by the same folks [California Newsreel] who gave us the 7-part documentary series:"Unnatural Causes....is Inequaltiy Making Us Sick?" [See: http://www.unnaturalcauses.org for access to that series and additional resources.]

Thank You Tina, for posting the link to the Federal Reserve Conference on Economic Inequality and Opportunity in October of 2014- at the Boston Federal Reserve....and all the other necessary "Evidence-Based" documents, you included, too!

I have a comment.  I don't want people who watch this film to leave with the conclusion... meaning non-hispanic whites...  that this is "irrelevant to me".  It isn't.  Child trauma happens in suburban areas and in rural areas too. I haven't seen the film so maybe it includes the obstacles faced by rural communities also..

 

Think the the recent publication of the paper... suicide deaths in youth are greater in rural areas.....

http://www.theatlantic.com/hea...ural-america/387313/

 

rural homelessness is as high as urban homelessness....

http://www.nhchc.org/wp-conten...2001HealingHands.pdf

 

 

And the narcotic overdose epidemic....

Risk Factors for Drug Overdose

Among those who died from drug overdose in 2012:

It is easy to forget rural areas... but the ACEs trauma in Rural America is amazingly high....

https://chronicleofsocialchang...isis_Report_1014.pdf (see page 8)..

 

Good video... but rural trauma issues are as great as they are for urban America... We had a drive by shooting in Rogers City (very small) just a few months ago....

 

I would hate for folks to come away with the notion "not on my street in my little rural town".  That take away would be mis-information... And it is hard to fight ACEs trauma here...

 

http://www.countyhealthranking...mes/overall/snapshot (the health indicators of the county I grew up in in Michigan is 80/82 and our quality of life is 82/82).  RWJF .... It is very rural.   (the only two counties worse than arenac are Genessee (Flint) and Wayne (Detroit).   

 

this compares Washtenaw with Arenac (ann arbor with standish). http://www.countyhealthranking...e?counties=161%2B011 

 

And here is a comparison of two counties in California:

 

http://www.countyhealthranking...e?counties=093%2B041

 

http://www.countyhealthranking...e?counties=033%2B075

 

Here is a comparison of three:

 

http://www.countyhealthranking...ties=093%2B041%2B073

 

There is one other thing about rural America I believe because I have always lived here is... They like their trauma to remain hidden..... It should be exposed... that is the only way to heal it........ we have kids here too...

 

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JIcT6Ft0slc

 

http://www.federalreserve.gov/.../yellen20141017a.htm

Thanks

Last edited by Former Member

I apologize for not previously thanking all who made this documentary film possible, including funding from the Center for Disease Control, all the good folks at PBS and its affiliates, the California sponsors, etc.. I miss the facebook "share" buttons, and so I can only hope my clicking the [facebook] "like" button will draw attention of my facebook friends out-of-state, as well as my fellow NH ACEsConnection members. A special "Thank You" also, to Jane Stevens for posting this!

 

I was disappointed to not see this scheduled for airing in New England (except Vermont, where it has  already aired in 2014, and had quite an assortment of organizational sponsors, and many showings). I hope my fellow NH ACEsConnection members will offer some suggestions for getting it aired here in NH, and Massachusetts-since a Boston film making organization is one of the collaborators.

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×