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State Dropping Ball in Dealing With Childhood Trauma, New Report Says [CaliforniaHealthline.org]

 

San Diego is mentioned in this article as a community that's integrating ACEs.

The lowest of 31 grades issued in the 2016 California Children's Report Card released on Wednesday was for dealing with the effects of childhood trauma.

In Children Now's biennial assessment of the status of California kids, researchers gave the state a "D-" for how it deals with childhood trauma. The report contends that children who experience traumatic problems such as abuse, neglect and witnessing violence at home can suffer serious long-term consequences, including health problems like diabetes and mental health challenges such as depression.

Ted Lempert, president of Children Now, a national advocacy organization based in California, said the key issue for legislators, policy makers and the public to glean from the report is that too many kids live in poverty in California.

"When you talk about trauma issues, the same truth carries over like it does in so many other parts of a kids life -- education, health care, mental health. The reality is that parents can't do it all alone, and it costs money to get help," Lempert said.

"We know the devastating impact poverty has on kids affecting a range of outcomes, from health, to brain development, to their chances of success in school," Lempert wrote in the report's introduction. "Over four million California children come from low-income households, and more than two million live below the poverty line. Those numbers are too big to ignore."

To read the rest of this article by George Lauer, go to: http://www.californiahealthlin...ith-childhood-trauma

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Amanda Snook posted:

Thank you Jane for sharing this. I oversee 21 before and after school programs in San Diego. Our target population is low-income and single parent homes. Every year the number of our children who have already experienced neglect, domestic violence, gangs, and substance abuse in the home continues to grow. We try to offer resources to the families when we notice behaviors and unfortunately, as this article points out, it costs money for these families, and they simply can't afford them, or insurance (if they have it) does not cover the needs of the child when it comes to dealing with childhood trauma and its impact on day to day life, health, and success with school work as well as peer to peer interactions. I am pleased to read that San Diego County is one of the two counties receiving grant funding to provide a better look at the lifelong impacts these experiences can cause. 

Hi Amanda,

 That is wonderful about your after school programs. Do you have any in North County San Diego? Betsy Shapiro ATR-BC

As the Center for Youth Wellness titled their state report in 2014, ACEs is a hidden epidemic that still doesn't have enough resources to eradicate it, and that means more kids and families that suffer. But the momentum is gaining to change this, especially in San Diego!

Thank you Jane for sharing this. I oversee 21 before and after school programs in San Diego. Our target population is low-income and single parent homes. Every year the number of our children who have already experienced neglect, domestic violence, gangs, and substance abuse in the home continues to grow. We try to offer resources to the families when we notice behaviors and unfortunately, as this article points out, it costs money for these families, and they simply can't afford them, or insurance (if they have it) does not cover the needs of the child when it comes to dealing with childhood trauma and its impact on day to day life, health, and success with school work as well as peer to peer interactions. I am pleased to read that San Diego County is one of the two counties receiving grant funding to provide a better look at the lifelong impacts these experiences can cause. 

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