Skip to main content

Blog

Do we, in Ireland, have our very own Dr Nadine in Dr Clíona Ní Cheallaigh ? HEALTH PROGRAMME FOR THE SOCIALLY EXCLUDED IS REAPING BENEFITS

Irish Health Innovator 1 : Dr Clíona Ní Cheallaigh. (7 May 2019) Dr Cliona Ní Cheallaigh, consultant in general medicine and infectious diseases at Dublin St James Hospital, pioneers a unique programme of inclusion health. This is a dedicated service to tackle health and social inequities among our most vulnerable and socially excluded populations: the homeless, people with substance use disorders, sex workers, and prisoners. A year-long pilot study of Ní Cheallaigh’s programme showed...

As More Children Show Symptoms of Trauma, Head Start Programs Expand Support Services

This story is part of an EdSurge Research series about the early childhood education workforce. HAMILTON, Ohio — Suzanne Prescott first noticed the changes in children’s behaviors in 2015 "She was fielding reports of kids knocking over bookshelves, tables and chairs; hitting their classmates; and causing physical harm to themselves and their teachers. Not only were more 3-, 4- and 5-year-olds having outbursts, they were doing so with an intensity Prescott had never before seen. In some...

In search of a mother's love

Thank you for reading: this is inspired by two ACEs childhood abandonment and sexual abuse. I wrote this when my adoptive mother died and I was clearing the clutter from her house. She valued objects and "stuff"; and my identity was enmeshed in hers.

What Can the Coronavirus Teach Us? [newyorker.com]

By Bill McKibben, The New Yorker, March 5, 2020 There’s nothing good about the novel coronavirus—it’s killing many people, and shutting millions more inside, with fear as their main companion. However, if we’re fated to go through this passage, we may as well learn something from it, and it does strike me that there are a few insights that are applicable to the climate crisis that shadows all of our lives. Some of these lessons are obvious: giant cruise ships are climate killers and, it...

Bringing Baby Home Educator Training

Two thirds of couples experience a decline in relationship satisfaction upon the birth of their first child. This can lead to postpartum depression and reduced involvement by the father in the life of their children. Even the strongest relationships are strained during the transition to parenthood. Lack of sleep, never-ending housework and new fiscal concerns can lead to profound stress. The Bringing Baby Home Educator Training prepares people to independently teach pregnant and parenting...

Resilience Week VA 2020!

The Greater Richmond TICN is leading efforts for the first annual Resilience Week for Virginia. Resilience Week VA is May 3-9, 2020. Check out the GRTICN Resilience Week webpage to find flyers, an infograph with ideas for each day of the week and handouts of ways to practice the themes on each day. Hooray for VA!

Five Types of Psychotherapy and How They Can Help You

When people think of psychotherapy, they often visualize Dr. Sigmund Freud holding a note pad with his client lying on a couch facing away from him. While it is true that there are still some professionals who utilize Freud’s form of psychoanalysis, there are many different types of psychotherapy that exist to aid in the healing process. In this article, we will examine together five different types of psychotherapeutic techniques and how they can help you heal. Different Reasons for Seeking...

Combating child labour through education!!!

Children Lifeline Trust helped five children's who got admission in school. Education is a crucial component of any effective effort to eliminate child labour. There are many interlinked explanations for child labour. No single factor can fully explain its persistence and, in some cases, growth. The way in which different causes, at different levels, interact with each other ultimately determines whether or not an individual child becomes a child labourer.

Housing-Focused Interventions at the Top of Health Systems' Community Investments [housingmatters.urban.org]

By Leora I. Horwitz, Carol Chang, Harmony N. Arcilla, et al., Housing Matters, March 4, 2020 A hospital’s mission is to improve the health and well-being of its patients and communities it serves. Traditionally, hospitals accomplish this goal by providing health care services, but an increasing recognition of how social determinants—factors such as housing, neighborhoods, environmental conditions, education, and the built environment—affect health has inspired many hospitals and health...

When Students Don't Feel Safe in the Neighborhood: How Can Schools Help? [dcpolicycenter.org]

By Yunsoo Park, D.C. Policy Center, March 3, 2020 In D.C., a large share of children and youth up to age 17 are likely to be exposed to traumatic events: 21.3 percent have been exposed to an adverse childhood experience (ACE), including an estimated 9 percent who have been a victim or witness to neighborhood violence. Community violence is a common example of childhood adversity, which is a broad umbrella term for a range of circumstances that pose a serious threat to a child’s behavioral...

Racially Integrated High Schools Often Conceal Segregated Classes, New Study Shows [chalkbeat.org]

By Matt Barnum, Chalkbeat, March 3, 2020 A truly integrated high school is hard to find. That’s the conclusion of a new North Carolina study that takes a look at two kinds of integration: whether students of different races and ethnicities attend the same schools, and whether those students actually sit in the same classrooms. What it finds is troubling, if not surprising. Across the state, even when high schools appear racially integrated, their classrooms are often racially segregated. [...

The Case for Open Borders [newyorker.com]

By Zoey Poll, The New Yorker, February 20, 2020 In the past decade, the government of Australia spent more than fifteen million dollars on an advertising campaign designed to deter prospective migrants. The multimedia effort, which has been lauded by President Trump, featured bold, red text—“no way: you will not make australia home”—over images of dark, choppy seas. The Department of Homeland Security has distributed similar flyers at migrant shelters in Mexico, near the border: “The next...

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×