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March 2018

The Rise and Fall of American Public Housing [citylab.com]

Of all that came out of the mid-20th-century liberal consensus, perhaps nothing ended up so reviled as public housing. Bedeviled by hyper-segregation, urban decline, de-industrialization, and other social ills, government-funded affordable housing in large cities of the United States suffered from decades of bad press. By the 1990s, its failure was so broadly assumed that most of America cheered on the Clinton administration when it demolished huge swathes of the nation’s public housing. Ben...

When Kids Come To School With Trauma, These NC Teachers Try And Listen [wunc.org]

One day last fall, teachers sauntered past a wall in W.A. Pattillo Middle School in Tarboro as if they were studying works of art. Really, they were looking at the names of all 265 of their students, each written neatly on an index card. They contemplated which students they had meaningful relationships with, and placed dots next to those students’ names. “Then we were able to step back and see which students didn’t have a dot, or didn’t have as many dots as other kids,” said Byron Bullock,...

Mental health collaborative tackles fire-related trauma in Sonoma County [pressdemocrat.com]

When a North Bay fire survivor walks into her private practice office, Santa Rosa psychologist Alisa Liguori Stratton never presumes to know exactly what they’re going through. Liguori Stratton, who lost the Fountaingrove home where she and her family lived, has a pretty good idea of the type of post-fire trauma many are suffering, whether they lost a home or not. But the experience — the 15 minutes she and her family had to flee their home, the loss of everything they own — is not a type of...

Oprah calls Trauma Informed Care "game changing," addresses long-term effects of trauma on 60 Minutes this Sunday, March 11

On CBS This Morning, Oprah Winfrey gave a preview of an upcoming 60 Minutes segment she recently filmed about childhood trauma and resilience. The 60 Minutes story will air this Sunday, March 11 at 7:00 p.m. ET and 6 p.m. central time on CBS 58. In putting her trauma and resilience story together, Oprah interviewed Dr. Bruce Perry of the ChildTrauma Academy and Tim Grove , Chief Clinical Officer at SaintA. She also interviewed SaintA client, Alisha, a very brave and inspiring young woman who...

The Price They Pay [propublica.org]

THE BURDEN of high drug costs weighs most heavily on the sickest Americans. Drug makers have raised prices on treatments for life-threatening or chronic conditions like multiple sclerosis, diabetes and cancer. In turn, insurers have shifted more of those costs onto consumers. Saddled with high deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs that expose them to a drug’s rising list price, many people are paying thousands of dollars a month merely to survive. For more than a year, President Donald...

Don’t Arm Teachers; Arm Communities with Prevention Supports [jjie.org]

One week after a gunman took the lives of 17 students and teachers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (MSD) in Parkland, Florida, students across the country stood in solidarity with students from MSD and walked out of their classes to demand action on gun control. Time and again after mass shootings, we see a call to action, but Congress has failed to pass a single piece of legislation strengthening our nation’s gun laws despite one tragic story after another. After the Valentine’s Day...

Is Gratitude Good for Your Health? [greatergood.berkeley.edu]

After 15 years of research, we know that gratitude is a key to psychological well-being. Gratitude can make people happier , improve their relationships , and potentially even counteract depression and suicidal thoughts . But might the benefits of gratitude go beyond that? Could gratitude be good for your physical health, too? While some studies have associated gratitude with a whole slew of benefits—from fewer aches and pains to improved sleep to better cardiovascular health—others have...

Victims of Spousal Abuse are Losing Their Children to Social Services [psmag.com]

Amy, a domestic violence survivor and disabled veteran of the Iraq War, did everything in her power to protect her son. Her abuser—who threw her off a third-floor balcony and nearly ended her life multiple times—is also her son's biological father. In 2012, Amy's abuser, Terrance, kidnapped their four-year-old son from daycare and broke into Amy's rental home in Texas, where he assaulted her. Two weeks after the kidnapping, a stranger dropped Amy's son back off at daycare with a burn on his...

Meet the Muppet Bringing Joy to Syrian Refugees [ozy.com]

Like Sesame Street’s the Merry Monster, Tonton has wild orange hair, and like Elmo, she prefers to speak in the third person. But this pint-size Muppet with the outsize personality, known for being somewhat disorganized and prone to fits of restless curiosity, doesn’t live on Sesame Street. Well, not exactly. She lives in a place called Hikayat Simsim, the Jordanian version of Sesame Street that premiered in 2003, when Tonton was just 4 (she hasn’t aged much). Brought to life by puppeteer...

People are dying because we misunderstand how addicts think [vox.com]

The American opioid epidemic claimed 63,600 lives in 2016 alone. While the public policy challenge is daunting, the problem isn’t that we lack any effective treatment options. The data shows that we could save many lives by expanding medication-assisted treatments and adopting harm reduction policies like needle exchange programs . Yet neither of these policies has been widely embraced. Why? Because these treatments are seen as indulging an addict’s weakness rather than “curing” it.

'Which Kids Do We Care About?': A Conversation with Noor Tagouri [psmag.com]

Last year, 34 sex workers were murdered in the United States—that we know of. There's little accurate data for this multi-billion-dollar industry that exists in the shadows. It's a black-market business where workers are far more likely to face violence than in conventional jobs, but they're also at risk if they call a cop. Yet sex workers continue to ply their trade for money. Hardline critics hold that all prostitution is exploitation, even if the sex worker gives her consent; advocates...

State Policy Guide on Preventing and Healing Childhood Trauma

There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way in which it treats its children. --Nelson Mandela, Former President of South Africa Every child needs access to the opportunities that prepare him or her to compete in the changing economies and realities of the 21st century. Unfortunately, for too many children, exposure to violence and traumatic events in the home, school, or community can affect them throughout their entire lives . We are thrilled to release this brand new...

Research Review: Childhood Trauma and its Effects on Mothers in Home Visiting Programs [Prevent Child Abuse America]

Each month Prevent Child Abuse America's Chief Research and Strategy Officer, Dr. Bart Klika, does a quick run-down of emerging research related to child abuse and neglect prevention. In this inaugural installment, Dr. Klika walks through some of the recent research into the effects of childhood trauma and how the lasting effects of this trauma is impacting mothers who participate in home visiting programs. Watch the video here

Social workers, neighbors and teachers help break negative cycles [tucson.com]

Children in troubled families are often destined for troubled lives — unless they get help before their brains become “hard-wired for stress.” That’s what scientist Katie McLaughlin says happens when children endure abuse or neglect, homelessness or hunger. McLaughlin, director of the Stress and Development Lab at the University of Washington , said there are scientifically proven ways to help, but getting those services to children and families is a challenge. To end the cycle, Tucson is...

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