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New Report Explores Paid Family Leave: How Much Time is Enough?

A growing body of research is finding that, on the whole, job-protected paid family leaves of adequate duration and wage replacement lead to more income and gender equality, significant reductions in infant, maternal and even paternal mortality, improved physical and mental health for children and parents, greater family stability and economic security, business productivity, and economic growth.

Violence, Art and Well-Being

There has been so much violence lately that it is hard to capture in a sentence or two (or three). From the shootings at the practice field for the Congressional baseball games to the rampages in London, most recently outside a Mosque, to the killings in our streets, both adults and children are exposed to violence. And, the media captures this violence -- and repeats it at all hours of the day and night. The images of violence -- and the reality of violence -- affects us. Surely, all this...

The Hoarding of the American Dream [CityLab.com]

There’s a certain type of financial confessional that has had a way of going viral in the post-recession era. The University of Chicago law professor complaining his family was barely keeping their heads above water on $250,000 a year . This hypothetical family of three in San Francisco making $200,000, enjoying vacations to Maui, and living hand-to-mouth. This real New York couple making six figures and merely “ scraping by .” In all of these viral posts, denizens of the upper-middle class...

For Renters, the Housing Crisis Never Ended [CityLab.com]

Ten years out from the start of the Great Recession, the housing market in the U.S. has finally returned to normal. Home prices in 2016 eclipsed the pre-crisis highs from about a decade ago. The number of homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages continues to plummet. Homeowners are making back some (but not all) of the wealth they lost to the mortgage foreclosure crisis. The nation may be free of one housing crisis, but it’s still deeply mired in another one. That’s one jarring...

Even the Insured Often Can't Afford Their Medical Bills [TheAtlantic.com]

A chance trip to Long Island’s Adventureland amusement park just might have saved Cassidy McCarthy’s life. After Cassidy—whose family calls her Cassie—then 4, complained about pain and nausea following a ride on the Ladybug rollercoaster, her dad, Daniel, a registered nurse, felt her stomach and discovered a small bump. A CT scan ordered up at a local hospital’s emergency room revealed a kidney tumor. It was another seemingly chance decision by Daniel McCarthy to sign on as a volunteer...

Power Causes Brain Damage [TheAtlantic.com]

If power were a prescription drug, it would come with a long list of known side effects. It can intoxicate. It can corrupt. It can even make Henry Kissinger believe that he’s sexually magnetic. But can it cause brain damage? When various lawmakers lit into John Stumpf at a congressional hearing last fall, each seemed to find a fresh way to flay the now-former CEO of Wells Fargo for failing to stop some 5,000 employees from setting up phony accounts for customers. But it was Stumpf’s...

Preventing Early Childhood Adversity Before It Starts: Maximizing Medicaid Opportunities [CHSCS.org]

The first 1,000 days of a child’s life are a critical window for cognitive, physical, and social development. Exposure to adverse experiences during this period and beyond in early childhood dramatically increases the potential for lifelong poor health and social outcomes. This in turn can result in substantially increased health care costs across an individual’s life span. Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) — including neglect, abuse, exposure to violence, family dysfunction, etc. — also...

Meditation, Yoga Can Reverse DNA Stress Reactions [PychCentral.com]

Mind-body interventions (MBIs), such as meditation, yoga and tai chi, don’t just relax us. According to a new study, they can reverse the molecular reactions in our DNA that cause ill health and depression . The research, published in the journal Frontiers in Immunology , reviews over a decade of studies analyzing how the behavior of our genes is affected by different MBIs, including mindfulness and yoga. Researchers at Coventry University in the U.K. and Radboud University in the...

Op-ed: Philly schools must prioritize trauma-informed learning [NewsWorks.org]

Powerful and surprisingly prevalent horrors are blocking access to education and ravaging children’s lives. Sadly, they remain the elephant in the classroom: adverse childhood experiences . Adverse childhood experiences include physical, sexual, and emotional abuse, including bullying; physical and emotional neglect; a missing parent, due to separation, divorce, incarceration, or death; witnessing household substance abuse, violence, or mental illness; and witnessing environmental violence.

A Trauma-Informed Toolkit for Providers in the Field of Intellectual Disabilities

Research has shown that people with intellectual/developmental disabilities (IDD) are at significantly more risk of ACEs and other forms of abuse and neglect than is the general population. This toolkit, attached here for free downloading, addresses a number of areas designed to support people with IDD who may have experienced trauma. The toolkit begins with a preface by Dan Tomasulo, who has been instrumental and groundbreaking in developing clinical approaches in IDD/Trauma work. This is...

3.3 million children would lose health insurance under the AHCA - Act now

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates that if the American Health Care Act (AHCA -- the repeal and replace healthcare bill passed by the House) were enacted, there would be a 50% increase in uninsured rates for everyone 18 and younger. Within 9 years, between 2.7 and 3.8 million children would lose insurance! Read the full report here: http://www.cbpp.org/…/d…/files/atoms/files/6-14-17health.pdf and contact your Senators.

The View Out the Window and In the Mirror

Daily, we throw gobs of money down into an abyss...pause, then repeat. Not figuratively, either, at least not the dollars part. It's real dollars, every day, all day long, because we attempt to find solutions to our most challenging issues by focusing on and band-aiding the symptoms — what is in our face. What's in my face these days? Personally, it's feeling overwhelmed by the magnitude of our challenges — child abuse, domestic violence, climate change, veterans coming home severely...

WEBINAR: Creating Healing Communities

Join the Illinois ACEs Response Collaborative on June 28th for a free webinar on "Creating Healing Communities." Lynn Todman, Ph.D., M.P.C. and Collaborative member Elena Quintana, Ph.D. will illustrate the link between the social determinants of health, wide spread trauma and emotional unrest, and inequality in Southwest Michigan. The discussion will underscore a need for basic education on Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) which can lead to changes in thinking, and promote policy and...

For Father’s Day From the Inside: Dear Dad … [JJIE.org]

"In Caddo Parish, in Shreveport, Louisiana, four out of five kids don't come back [to juvenile court]," said Henry Walker of Caddo Parrish Juvenile Services. "The one of out of five who do come back, come back constantly." According to Walker, the youth who do avoid regular run-ins with the law do so because they have mentors. At the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative's April 2017 convening in Orlando, Florida, youth workers reflect on the proactive impact mentors can have on the...

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