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October 2016

New Guidance on Trauma Screening in Schools

In partnership with the Defending Childhood State Policy Initiative and the National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice, new guidance has been released on trauma screening in schools. Importantly, this document lays out a series of important considerations when determining whether trauma screening is indicated in each context, and how to go about collecting and utilizing the data generated from the process. Please feel free to share input.

Educators’ “Complex Trauma” Resolution: Will it have an impact?

When I met up with school psychologists Donna Christy and Robert Hull at the Starbucks in Greenbelt, MD, they sparred good-naturedly about each other’s extra-curricular activities outside the school building—he says she is a big honcho with the National Education Association (NEA) and she says he will speak to any audience, anywhere (as long as his expenses are covered) on the subject of trauma and education. Both work for the Prince George’s (P.G.) County School District in nearby...

United States Ranks in Top 10 for Empathy [Consumer.Healthday.com]

If you're having a tough time, the United States is a pretty good place to find some understanding, a new study contends. The research found that America ranks seventh among nations in terms of empathy. More than 104,000 people from 63 countries completed an online survey of empathy, which measured compassion for others and the ability to imagine other people's point of view. Ecuador was ranked as the most empathetic country. It was followed by Saudi Arabia, Peru, Denmark, United Arab...

How Night Shifts Perpetuate Health Inequality [TheAtlantic.com]

A man claiming to be a police officer wrote to me recently with an important question, one that’s applicable to all people who sleep: Dr. Hamblin, I’m a police officer who works a night shift. … A lot of police departments have a rotating schedule requiring officers to change from nights to days, and back to nights again. My department keeps us on the same shift indefinitely unless we ask to change. Is there any research or medical opinion about working a rotating night-day schedule versus...

The Most Popular Office on Campus [TheAtlantic.com]

Today’s college students seek campus counseling services more often than any other generation in the modern history of the United States. Most of those who report mental-health challenges cite anxiety and depression as their top concerns. In last year’s 10-year summary report , the Center for Collegiate Mental Health set out to determine whether the overall growth in enrollment at universities was responsible for the increased usage of these services by retrospectively comparing the growth...

Book Review: Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools [JJIE.org]

“Though media and advocacy efforts have largely focused on the extreme and intolerable abuse cases involving Black boys,” begins Monique W. Morris in the introduction to her recently published book, “a growing number of cases involving Black girls have surfaced to reveal what many of us have known for centuries: Black girls are also directly impacted by criminalizing policies and practices that render them vulnerable to abuse, exploitation, dehumanization, and, under the worst circumstances,...

Advocates Working to End Harsh School Discipline That Leads to Dropping Out, Jail [JJIE.org]

Activists concerned about disciplinary policies that force students out of school and into the justice system will gather in cities across the country this week to make their case for reform. In Boston, they plan to fan out to ask their peers about their experiences with school discipline, results they will pass on to city school administrators. In Miami, the community will gather for a Forum on Black Lives focused on local county and school board races to ensure school discipline is on the...

District students benefit from ACEs trauma study [NorthCoastCitizen.com]

The Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (ACEs), conducted by Dr. Vince Felitti of Kaizer Permanente and Dr. Robert Anda of the Center for Disease Control, was a groundbreaking study when it’s findings were released in 1998, and it confirmed what nonviolence advocates, social service and health care providers had witnessed for decades–violence is bad for your health. ACEs provided a wealth of information to illustrate how deeply our individual and community health is impacted by trauma. [For...

Adverse events in childhood may affect child’s health [IndianExpress.com]

Household dysfunction or any adverse event in childhood may have a short-term affect on a child’s health and weight in early days as well, finds a study. The study suggested that children exposed to early adversity also have increased risk for asthma, infection, somatic complaints, and sleep disruption. Maternal mental health issues are associated with elevated cortisol levels, and maltreatment is associated with a lower cortisol profile. [For more of this story go to ...

ACEs Science Champions Series: Bryan Stevenson: To Heal National Trauma, We Need to Face Our Genocidal Past

Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative , won a U.S. Supreme Court case banning mandatory life sentencing without parole for anyone age 17 or younger. Based in Birmingham, Alabama, a state that officially celebrates Robert E. Lee and Martin Luther King, Jr., day together , the Harvard-trained lawyer has dedicated his life to serving the poor, the incarcerated, and children prosecuted as adults. Stevenson keynoted the final day of the 2016 Conference on Adverse Childhood...

North Carolina Infant/Early Childhood Mental Health Association Annual Conference

https://www.wakeahec.org/datafiles/49330brochure.pdf ScIence of ResIlIence: Building Adult Capabilities to Promote Early Childhood Mental Health The North Carolina Infant and Young Child Mental Health Association was founded five years ago with a mission to “promote a strong foundation for infants, toddlers, young children and their caregivers through public awareness, advocacy and professional development.” This year’s conference will focus on building adult capabilities – of parents and of...

Most states with little access to mental health resources also have the highest incarceration rates [BusinessInsiders.com]

If there's one problem in the United States more pressing than the staggering number of adults suffering from mental illness, it's the fact that nearly half of them aren't getting treatment for it. According to Mental Health America's recently released annual assessment , about 20% of U.S. adults — or 43.7 million people — have a mental health condition of some kind — and less than half of them are receiving the care they need. Among children and adolescents, the news is worse: Though the...

“Frequent Flyers” – How Implicit Bias Can Impact Clinical Care [MadInAmerica.com]

A group of researchers recently published a commentary in theJournal of the American Medical Association on one of the ways that implicit bias about persons diagnosed with 'mental illness' creeps into the seemingly neutral space of patient electronic health records. They focus on the group of clients who tend to be high utilizers of services at emergency departments and psychiatric crisis centers who “often have financial problems and present with chronic or untreated comorbid psychiatric...

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