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Watch 'The Children of Central City' documentary [Nola.com]

 

You've read the series. Now watch the documentary that brings "The Children of Central City" to an emotional, hopeful close. 

The multi-part special report by Jonathan Bullington and Richard Webster, with photos and video by Brett Duke and Emma Scott, premiered June 13 on NOLA.com and in The Times-Picayune. Produced as a project with the USC Annenberg School, it provides an in-depth look at the impact of growing up surrounded by violence in one of New Orleans' most culturally significant and crime-riddled neighborhoods.

The series, and the video, focus on the players, coaches and families surrounding the A.L. Davis Park Panthers youth football program. Among them is Jerome Temple, known to most as DJ Jubilee, a New Orleans bounce music legend who has coached the Panthers since 1997 -- and who counts 28 former players killed in the 21 years since.

The movie takes you from the playing field to the classrooms, the homes of the players and the offices of the social workers whose attempts to treat the children's post-traumatic stress are repeatedly thwarted by state budget cuts to mental healthcare.

[For more of this story go to https://www.nola.com/health/in....html#incart_gallery]

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I 'observed' similar circumstances in the Southeast Bronx, in 1972-73. In 2000, I attended a "Grand Rounds" continuing medical education presentation, at [then Dartmouth, now] Geisel Medical School, by an Epidemiologist who noted: "52% of Detroit Metropolitan Area Schoolchildren met the DSM-IV criteria for PTSD", Similar numbers have been reported more recently in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Atlanta, and two weeks ago, at five charter schools in New Orleans. How long should it take to recognize and develop an intervention strategy for an Epidemic?

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