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October 2016

Law and Disorder: How Police Practices Antagonize [PsychCentral.com]

Charlotte. Baton Rouge. Tulsa. Minneapolis. Los Angeles. Ferguson. The violence explodes on your television set. You seethe. “This is 2016 — not 1968. Does the U.S. now stand for ‘Under Siege?”’ you fume. Your anger is righteous. Racism is prevalent in the United States. And, yes, there are racially tinged police officers infecting American police forces. But is your anger misplaced? Amidst the over-the-top headlines and screaming protests, a fundamental question remains: What can be done to...

Scarcity Of Mental Health Care Means Patients — Especially Kids — Land In ER [KHN.org]

On any given day, pediatrician Lindsay Irvin estimates a quarter of her patients need psychiatric help. She sees teens who say they are suicidal, and elementary school children who suffer chest pains stemming from bullying anxiety. Though she does her best, she doesn’t consider herself qualified to treat them at the level they need at her practice in San Antonio. She doesn’t have the training, she said, to figure which medications are best suited to treat their various mental health...

E Is For Empathy: Sesame Workshop Takes A Crack At Kindness [NPR.org]

Parents and teachers are worried. They believe that today's kids are growing up in an unkind world and that learning to be kind is even more important than getting good grades. But, when it comes to defining "kind," parents and teachers don't always agree. That's according to a new survey of some 2,000 parents and 500 teachers from the educational nonprofit behind Sesame Street, Sesame Workshop. Kindness is well-trod territory for Sesame. Here's actor Mark Ruffalo trying to teach a Muppet...

What Makes For Quality Child Care? It Depends Whom You Ask [NPR.org]

When Jolie Ritzo was looking for day care for her son Cannon in Falmouth, Maine, she checked out as many centers as she could. She was looking for a place with the right feel. "Most importantly, the people who are providing the care are loving and kind, nurturing and interested in developing these little beings," she says. There was one center in town that had a great reputation, but it was so pricey, Ritzo says, "It would break the bank." She enrolled Cannon in a family child care based in...

Turning Detroit's Abandoned Homes Into Greenhouses [CityLab.com]

When Steven Mankouche first saw the house at 3347 Burnside Street in Detroit, in 2013, it was buckling and scarred with burn marks. An artist named Andy Malone, who lived nearby, had just purchased the lot for $500 and was hoping to find some way to bring it back to life. Mankouche, an architect, and his partner, Abigail Murray, a ceramicist, floated a proposal to do just that, by commandeering the house’s foundation and repurposing it as a sort of plant nursery. The following year, a team...

About Those 79 Cents [TheAtlantic.com]

Extensive research shows that even when controlling for factors like education, skill, and experience, women routinely earn less than men employed in the same professions. Often, this argument is accompanied by the now-famous statistic that women earn about 79 cents for every dollar men make at work . This is an important data point, but focusing on that figure alone masks the role race can play in perpetuating these disparities. For instance, it is important to ask: Which women? The...

Guilt or Grateful or Both

Sitting across a Baker's Square table from my birth-brother, sipping coffee and eating pie grateful slowly turned to guilt. I first met my birth brother, 5 years younger than me, 20 years ago. We met when the State agreed to open my closed adoption record to help me learn more about my medical history. I met him, my birth sister, and birth mom at a restaurant outside of Chicago- a middle point for us to meet as we lived in different states. When I walked into the restaurant I almost ran into...

Berkeley-based nonprofit opens clinic to provide mental health services to refugees [DailyCal.org]

Young, living in the country illegally and alone, Hector Estrada was initially unsure about trauma therapy after immigrating to the United States from Mexico following the death of his brother. But after taking advantage of the services provided by the Berkeley-based nonprofit Partnerships for Trauma Recovery, or PTR, Estrada was able to open up. “(Refugees) want a feeling that somebody cares about them,” he said. “You feel safe, you know, they helped me so much with the trauma, with feeling...

Bringing Equality to Health [LivingCities.org]

In America, health outcomes are far too often dictated by the color of your skin. There is an almost 40% gap between the quality of care received by whites and African-Americans in the United States, and the disparity persists even when insurance status, education levels, and income are taken into account. That accounts for much of the U.S. life expectancy gap of 3.4 years between whites and blacks. 40% The gap between the quality of health care received by whites and African-Americans in...

Science backs how much foster care sucks — kids suffer more health problems [NYDailyNews.com]

Now it’s a scientific fact that foster kids have a hard-knock life. Children in the U.S. foster care system suffer significantly higher risks of emotional and physical health problems, the journal Pediatrics reported Monday, such as depression, asthma and obesity. University of California, Irvine sociologists surveyed more than 900,000 children. They found those in foster care were seven times more likely to be depressed, five times more likely to be anxious, and six times more prone to...

ACEs articles by category Oct 18 2016 -- Wisconsin Dept of Health Services

Scott Web, an ACEsConnection member who works at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, sends out this list of links every couple of weeks. Most of the links are from posts on ACEsConnection, and, as you can see, they're organized by category. Some of you have asked if the summaries and links we post can be put into categories. Thanks so much, Scott, for sharing this with the ACEsConnection community! ACEs, Adversity's Impact How childhood trauma can cause premature aging Why parents...

Is it a Parenting with ACEs Thing or Just a Parent Thing? Why Is It So Hard to Just Stop?

[Note from Jane] --Cissy White wrote this for the Parenting with ACEs group. I've cross-posted it to the main network because I think many people who aren't members of Parenting with ACEs would be interested. And if you're interested in helping develop tools for how parents can educate other parents about ACEs, or their communities about ACEs, I invite you to join the group! I have a friend going through a rough patch. She was physically sick with a back to back virus which is no fun for...

A Year to Find Out: Can Living Alone Help Heal Trauma?

I have never really been good at relationships. Intimacy scares me, and trust is something that is earned. When I travel now, speaking about the lasting effects of my trauma and the scars of the foster care system, I spend lots of talking describing how difficult it can be to have a relationship with me. “You have to do lots of the heavy lifting, because I’m just not going to,” is what I think. People are often confused by this seeming contradiction. I’ve been in a relationship with my...

Foster care children at much greater risk of physical, mental health problems [EurekAlert.org]

Children who have been in the U.S. foster care system are at a significantly higher risk of mental and physical health problems - ranging from learning disabilities, developmental delays and depression to behavioral issues, asthma and obesity - than children who haven't been in foster care, according to a University of California, Irvine sociologist. "No previous research has considered how the mental and physical well-being of children who have spent time in foster care compares to that of...

Op-Ed How to fix solitary confinement in American prisons [LATimes.com]

Hundreds of prisoners live in solitary confinement in Los Angeles County jails. On average, they spend at least one year in a cell the size of a wheelchair-accessible bathroom stall, leaving only a few times a week, one at a time, for showers or exercise. Meals arrive through a slot in the cell door. Between the long hours in isolation and the steel doors, a prisoner might go days, or longer, without looking another person in the eye. Solitary confinement costs taxpayers 2 to 3 times more...

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