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5th Annual 2018 NoSpankChallenge!

Help us prevent child abuse by ending spanking and promoting positive parenting! This FREE and LIVE annual event begins April 16th culminating on April 30, International SpankOut Day, which began in 1998 to bring worldwide attention to the need to end physical punishment of children. The NoSpankChallenge supports parents and educators like you wherever you are on your journey toward creating a more peaceful and equitable world for children. FREE ONLINE Event April 16-30 LOCAL PORTLAND Event...

Rural Communities Opioid Response (Planning) (RCORP) Initiative Grants

The Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP) plans to award up to 75 grants to rural communities as part of a new Rural Communities Opioid Response (Planning) (RCORP) initiative in FY 18. Successful awardees will receive up to $200,000 for one-year to develop plans to implement opioid use disorder prevention, treatment, and recovery interventions designed to reduce opioid overdoses among rural populations. The initiative will focus...

Highlights of the March 7, 2018 Sierra Nevada Learning Community

Highlights of Nada Yorke’s presentation on ACES and Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Nada Yorke, LCSW and trainer from Yorke Consulting, asked participants to think about the terminology they use to describe their clients. How we refer to our clients can frequently impact the way we approach our work. Next, we looked at the impact of ACES on both the perpetrators of IPV, and those that have survived IPV. Attendees were asked to estimate the impact of ACES on the people they serve. Overall,...

School-based yoga can help children better manage stress and anxiety [sciencedaily.com]

Researchers worked with a public school in New Orleans to add mindfulness and yoga to the school's existing empathy-based programming for students needing supplementary support. Third graders who were screened for symptoms of anxiety at the beginning of the school year were randomly assigned to two groups. A control group of 32 students received care as usual, which included counseling and other activities led by a school social worker. The intervention group of 20 students participated in...

New Philadelphia mural brings childhood trauma into view [whyy.org]

A fanciful and colorful vision now adorns a Philadelphia office building, but its message is intended to bring more awareness to the serious issue of childhood trauma. Mural Arts Philadelphia and the city’s behavioral health department Tuesday dedicated the new mural covering both sides of the building across Delaware Avenue from the SugarHouse Casino. Its north side depicts a dreamscape of a theater production: A row boat made of a crescent moon floats on a watery stage, framed by a sunny,...

The kids aren’t all right [revealnews.org]

To listen to this podcast, click here . Federal law requires colleges and universities to track and disclose sexual assaults on campus. It’s different for kindergarten through 12th grade, where there are no similar requirements for cases involving assaults between students. In elementary, middle and high schools across the U.S., the Associated Press found a shocking level of sexual violence among students, including on U.S. military bases. On this episode of Reveal, we delve into the results...

Financial literacy can hold key to college success [edsource.org]

Picture this: Sonya, a low-income student at a California high school, receives an acceptance letter from the University of Hawaii. While the tuition is higher than a public university in California, she decides to go to Hawaii, even though it means that both Sonya — not her real name — and her mother would have to take out loans. After two semesters of lackluster grades, Sonya loses her merit-based aid and has a hold on her student account (also known as a bursar’s account ) due to an...

Lisa Madigan pushes for bill to require training before treating sexual assault patients [chicagotribune.com]

Attorney General Lisa Madigan called on legislators Wednesday to require that state hospitals have a trained medical provider available to treat sexual assault patients. “After years of unwillingness and delay, this bill, if it becomes law, will finally require Illinois hospitals to do what they should have been doing all along,” she said. “I think it should be a moral obligation, but because it hasn’t worked that way, we’ll make it a legal obligation.” Just 32 nurses in Illinois are...

On “Vice,” a “Wire” Alum’s Thoughtful Study of Juvenile Mass Incarceration [newyorker.com]

Raised in the System,” the first episode of the new season of HBO’s news-magazine series “Vice,” provides an insightful look at juvenile mass incarceration in the United States, managing a tone that’s both grave and encouraging. Our guide is the actor and activist Michael K. Williams, who played Omar on “The Wire.” Williams grew up in the Vanderveer projects, in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, and has been visiting incarcerated loved ones since age seventeen. In 2014, when Williams was appointed...

Echo Yard, where normal prison rules no longer apply [sandiegouniontribune.com]

Echo Yard, Donovan prison's newest unit, is built around a dirt and concrete lot the size of two football fields. The prairie-flat expanse is bordered by sheer concrete walls, rising 70 feet, with ground-floor doors leading into cell blocks. To civilian visitors, Echo looks harsh. To Anerae “X-Raided” Brown, Echo looks wonderful. “You have to earn your way here,” said Brown, 43, a convicted murderer who logged 20 years in other prisons before entering Echo Yard last November. “This is as...

The Scarlet Number: Is Pittsburgh’s Ethically Risky System Of Big Data For Foster Care Coming To California? [witnessla.com]

One massive leak of middle-class Americans’ data seems to have the whole world in an uproar. A firm known as Cambridge Analytica allegedly improperly obtained personal information given to Facebook by 87 million people. Then, according to The New York Times , “The firm, which was tied to President Trump’s 2016 campaign, used the data to target messages to voters.” Americans gave this information to Facebook voluntarily. Now that Facebook apparently failed to keep it secure, some Americans...

Why Stephon Clark's Death Is Having Serious Mental Health Impacts — Especially On His Brother Ste’Vante [capradio.org]

Ste’Vante Clark has seemed consumed by grief since the March 18 shooting of his younger brother Stephon Clark. At the funeral, he took the microphone and led the crowd in a fierce chant of his brother’s name. When his rage subsided, he became anxious and fidgety. “They’re talking about walking me out already, they’re talking about kicking me out of my brother’s funeral,” he told attendees at his brother’s funeral. “They’re all in here for money, the Christians have never looked out for us,...

Scared by the News? Take the Long View: Progress Gets Overlooked [nytimes.com]

“I’m taking a break from the news.” It’s a refrain I hear more and more often. Last week, Dan Rather sent out a tweet saying that “even I feel I need a break” from the news sometimes. His remedy: a walk in the woods. Last year, the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found that over a third of American respondents avoid the news, the main reason being the “depressing nature of the content itself.” The solution isn’t to soften the news, of course. But if journalism provided a more...

How to Help Men Break “Man Rules” and Talk About Trauma [BrickelandAssociates.com]

When someone asked me, “Do you treat men?” I realized I needed to openly address mental health concerns and challenges specific to men. From a trauma-informed point of view, there’s not much difference in the course of therapy when working with either men or women. What is different, if anything, about therapy for men? As therapists, we need to be aware of how men may show up differently than women in therapy. Cultural beliefs, norms and expectations shape how men experience emotions and...

Why America’s Black Mothers and Babies Are in a Life-or-Death Crisis [NYTimes.com]

Excerpt from the New York Times Magazine. Full article here . "The reasons for the black-white divide in both infant and maternal mortality have been debated by researchers and doctors for more than two decades. But recently there has been growing acceptance of what has largely been, for the medical establishment, a shocking idea: For black women in America, an inescapable atmosphere of societal and systemic racism can create a kind of toxic physiological stress, resulting in conditions —...

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