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U.S. Sen. Heitkamp headlines May 25 briefing—trauma is “key”

 

When U.S. Senator Heidi Heitkamp arrived mid-way through the May 25, 2016, congressional briefing on the Science of Trauma, she delivered her remarks (starts at 27:48 through 41:45) with passion, humor, and most of all, a sense of urgency to the room full of Capitol Hill staff and a smattering of advocates. Her message was macro as well as micro—change national policy to incorporate what the science tells us about trauma, and see and respond to the needs of those you encounter in everyday life.

Reaching back to her days as the North Dakota Attorney General, she told the story about the state’s prison warden who gave her early insight into trauma. The warden would interview all new inmates and ask them about their lives and when they described the abuse they suffered as children, he would write down a number by their name—the age they were when the abuse started and in his view, the age they now were developmentally. She added that the word “trauma” was never used but both she and the warden knew that these childhood experiences fundamentally changed who that person became.

Heitkamp urged the staff to go back to their bosses and examine how the science should inform the many issues that come before them, whether the policy relates to criminal justice, health care, social services, education, or some combination.

She also told a favorite story to illustrate the importance of responding to the everyday problems of individuals—she convinced a dentist to provide dentures to a veteran in his 90s who sorely needed them, acknowledging how difficult it was to respond to his need in light of his extreme crankiness. She concluded by saying that working on big issues is “kind of worthless” unless there is a human impact.

Aheitkamp
Sen. Heidi Heitkamp

Heitkamp ended her remarks this way:

I am convinced that more than anything else I can do in this town is to spread the word about making sure that children can get trauma treatment, making sure that we have trauma-informed programs, making sure that we understand this as a public health crisis—this can have huge macro results for us economically but equally as important, can change the lives of a few people in this country…which is why we are all here.

 She then turned to the panel, thanked us and said: “Keep preaching, keep preaching!”

The Campaign for Trauma-Informed Policy and Practice (CTIPP) sponsored the event. CTIPP is a new organization comprised of individuals and groups from all sectors and walks of life working together to create a better future by promoting trauma-informed policy and practice.

This briefing is intended to be the first in a series of three to expose congressional staff first to the science of trauma, and then to explore trauma-informed practices and policy. It became evident to the founders of CTIPP that education about trauma should be a high priority when major bills relating to mental health, criminal justice reform, and education did not address trauma in significant ways. Exposure to this information in the U.S. Congress is growing as demonstrated by a recent hearing on mental health in the Finance Committee where Dr. Maggie Bennington-Davis devoted most of her oral testimony to the impact of adversity on health.

After my presentation providing the basics on the Adverse Childhood Experience study and its implications, Dr. Nathan Fox, director, University of Maryland Child Development Lab, addressed the impact of trauma on the brain and mind/body, followed by Dr. Zack Kaminsky, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, who reviewed epigenetics and the intergenerational transmission of trauma

Wendy Ellis
Dr. Wendy Ellis

Dr. Wendy Ellis, manager of child health policy, Office of Child Health Policy & Advocacy at Nemours Children’s Health System, moderated the program. She included a personal note about having an ACE score of 8 to make the point that the ACEs science must include resilience science and to acknowledge those who “aren’t standing in this room today.” She said she was already a young adult when the ACE Study was published but the people who raised her “knew what was going on.”

She concluded, “There is real hope and real power with the resilience part of the narrative.”

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Is it possible to <love> this post? As <like> just isn't strong enough!

Such a great initiative and an inspiration. Here at the bottom of the world in Christchurch, New Zealand, along with my powerhouse friend Sal Faid, I'm hoping to start something similar.

Our region, Canterbury, was and is heavily impacted by an unusual pattern of continued earthquake activity over the last five years. The lasting effects we are seeing on a generation of children, youth and adults is similar to some of those from complex trauma and ACEs, and is adding to and exacerbating the existing effects of ACEs in our region.

Meanwhile, New Zealand as a whole is wrestling with some of the worst statistics in the world for child abuse and death. This is a wonderful country in so many ways but we battle the legacy of ACEs no less than anywhere else.

So we are watching closely to see how your campaign progresses, what we can learn and how we can work to start improving things here too.  Please keep posting!

Thanks for sharing Elizabeth; and great job representing the work. 

The question Dr. Ellis posed about how to incentivize breaching the "silos" of policy/funding is very important to facilitating the (clearly necessary) multilayered wraparound approach the panel advocated. What emerging patterns of action (policy) are others in this or complementary communities seeing at local/state/national/international levels related to dismantling those walls? 

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