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How to Keep Children's Stress From Turning Into Trauma [nytimes.com]

 

By Stacy Steinberg, The New York Times, May 7, 2020

Children may be processing the disruptions in their lives right now in ways the adults around them do not expect: acting out, regressing, retreating or even seeming surprisingly content. Parents need to know that all of this is normal, experts say, and there are some things we can do to help.

“Our natural response to scary things is biologically to release stress hormones,” said Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, a pediatrician and surgeon general of the state of California, and the author of “The Deepest Well: Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Adversity.” The release of stress hormones activates our fight or flight response. Our bodies, in responding with the release of stress hormones, are doing exactly what they should be doing.

But in some cases, exposure to stressful events — which right now might include the absence of routines, a parent’s job loss and economic hardship, or the serious illness or death of someone a child cares about — can leave children feeling traumatized.

[Please click here to read more.]

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I love that this issue is getting attention from the NYT, but I am disturbed that we are promoting this idea that an ACE score can be used as an indicator of a PERSONS risk for later health problems. ACEs are about POPULATION level risk, not personal risk.

Rob Anda_ACE Score Strengths, Limitations, Misuse

Also, not loving the thermometer comparison.

"An ACE score is not the be-all and end-all,” Dr. Burke Harris said. Instead, she compares it to a thermometer. You can be sick and not have a fever. But if you have a fever, it is an indicator to everyone that you are sick, and that we need to pay close attention."

We do not want a take-away for readers to be that an ACE score is an indicator that someone is "sick."

Well intentioned article, but not getting a great score form me on accurate portrayal of ACEs science.  

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