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The Equestrians of North Philly [TheAtlantic.com]

For more than 100 years, the Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club has been countering crime with a love of horses. The non-profit, based in north Philadelphia, provides a safe environment for local teens to escape a community overcome by gang violence and unemployment. Photographer Ann Sophie Lindström spent several months documenting the organization to complete her interactive project, “ Don’t Fence Me In .” At first, the horsemen were not impressed by Lindström, but when she started sharing...

Half of CA Children Have Immigrant Parents [Kidsdata.org]

Sweeping changes to federal immigration policy could have a disproportionate effect on California, where 50 percent of children have at least one immigrant parent, compared to 25 percent nationwide, according to the latest data available on Kidsdata. That translates to 4.5 million children in California alone. In congressional districts 17, 34 and 46, which represent parts of greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area, more than 75 percent of children have at least one immigrant...

Five Things to Know about Military Families with Linda Sanford

Note: I adore Linda Sanford. She is also the author of one of my favorite books, Strong at the Broken Places: Overcoming the Trauma of Child Abuse which came out in 1991. So when I heard she was speaking at a local event hosted by The Riverside Trauma Center, about military families I had to go. I had not considered the stress faced by military families, many of who are also parenting with ACEs, as well. “There are five things I want you to know about military families,” said Linda Sanford.

Association of Maternal Child Health Programs honors Christy Bethell with the prestigious John MacQueen Lecture Award

Dr. Christina Bethell, professor of Population, Family and Reproductive Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, will be honored at the 2017 Annual Conference with the prestigious John MacQueen Lecture Award for her leadership in developing and implementing methods to measure and improve the performance of child health care systems. “Her contributions are used daily by MCH professionals, child health clinicians, researchers and policymakers,” said Edward Schor, senior...

HSC holds symposium on childhood adversity [DailyLobo.com]

On Tuesday evening UNM Health Sciences Center held a symposium to address the issues of childhood adversity affecting New Mexico. Dr. Andrew Hsi, professor of pediatrics at the UNM School of Medicine and a key figure in UNM’s fight against childhood adversity, walked on stage for his presentation with a large, black trash bag thrown over his shoulder. Hsi dropped the bag on the floor as he said that it was a visual presentation of the burden children and families carry with them after...

Americans Are Putting Off Medical Treatments Because They Can't Pay [TheAtlantic.com]

More than a quarter of Americans say that someone in their household is struggling to pay medical debt, according to a report from the Kauffman Family Foundation last year. Low-income and other uninsured people tend to be in this situation at higher rates. Many dealing with the crushing weight of medical debt aren’t those suffering from continuing, chronic illness—they’re people who have had a sudden or one-time illness. Given the state of most Americans’ finances, this isn’t surprising.

The Convoluted Path to Improving New York City's Schools [TheAtlantic.com]

The zone for Public School 67 was drawn exclusively around the sprawling Ingersoll public-housing complex, but as children trudge into the building, they can see the tips of the gleaming glass luxury towers that are reshaping the skyline around them in downtown Brooklyn. No children from those luxury condos have enrolled in P.S. 67. It has roughly 225 students; 99 percent are low-income. The school has struggled to stem sliding enrollment and to address poor safety ratings by parents and...

Are We There Yet? Sarah's Story

what it means to be a trauma-informed community — not only how we measure up, so to speak, but how and when does culture change and a shift in perspective arrive? How do we know we're “there" — wherever "there" is? When the rubber hits the road, what happens then? That's my big question.

Call for Presentations - 2017 Mississippi Trauma Informed Care Conference

2017 Mississippi Trauma Informed Care Conference “Standing in the Eye of the Storm” September 27 - 29, 2017 Call for Presentations For the past 3 years, several state and local agencies have hosted a Trauma Informed Conference. Each year, the premiere conferences have brought together over 600 participants representing mental health and substance abuse professionals, first responders, crisis staff, educators, homelessness, domestic violence, human trafficking and other advocacy agencies,...

MARC Welcomes Sandra Bloom to Advisory Committee

Sandra Bloom (left) and Leslie Lieberman, Senior Director at Health Federation of Philadelphia ___________________________ It was a mounting sense of anger that nudged Dr. Sandra Bloom from psychiatry to public health. After seeing thousands of patients—most of them trauma survivors being treated in an inpatient hospital setting—Bloom knew that she was not witnessing multiple, isolated, individual failures, but signs of a much bigger brokenness. “It became abundantly evident—and the Adverse...

It’s COA Awareness Week: So Let’s Look Into What Happens to Children of Addiction When They Grow Up [HuffingtonPost.com]

Much attention and most governmental funding streams have been and continue to be focused on the addict. The addict has the problem; the addict needs to get better. The country is still however, only beginning to catch on to the devastating and long-term impact that growing up with addiction has on children, and what that experience does to the most vulnerable and dependent among us. Read the entire article>> Author: Tian Dayton , Psychologist, author, specialist in addictions and...

When We’re Talking About Crowd Size at the Inauguration We Also Need to Talk About Class [PSMag.com]

The Women’s March in Washington had three times more people in attendance than did President Donald Trump’s inauguration. Many have argued about the reasons for these numbers (see here , here , and here ), and used them both individually and together to make claims about activism and political support . But something is missing from these conversations. In order to fully understand the differences in attendance at these events in D.C., and to avoid taking these numbers to mean something they...

They guarded severely mentally ill criminals, maybe Alaska's toughest job [ADN.com]

A lone Anchorage prison guard sits at the receiving end of Alaska's failed mental health system, trying to keep 28 acutely disturbed men from harming themselves or others. The Mike Module, as the unit is called at Anchorage Correctional Complex, is staffed by a single corrections officer and a single nurse except when clinicians visit. I sat down with two retired officers to find out what that job is like. "It can be miserable," said Bobby Houser, who worked in the unit for a dozen years...

Building on Arthur Evans' legacy: next steps for behavioral health in Philadelphia [Philly.com]

Dr. Arthur C. Evans steps down Friday after 12 years as commissioner of the city’s Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual disAbility Services – the name is one of myriad changes, large and small, that came under his watch. Evans brought tremendous vision and led a system-wide transformation effort focused on recovery, resilience, and self-determination . He embraced everything from prevention, early detection and intervention, to a variety of treatment types for the most serious...

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