Violence is just one part of childhood trauma. So why are we focusing so much on childhood violence?
Three Types of Stress
Five years before the first of many papers from the ACE Study was published in 1998, Dr. Bruce McEwen at Rockefeller University, with Dr. Eliot Stellar, used the term “allostatic load”
to describe how repeated chronic stress – “toxic stress” – produces
stress hormones that create wear and tear on the brain and the body.
Over the last five years, the concept of the effects of toxic stress on children was amplified by Dr. Jack Shonkoff at the Harvard University Center on the Developing Child.
He and his team describe three types of stress: Positive stress, which
children need to help them grow and thrive. Tolerable stress, which is
temporary, and where a caring adult helps a child to recover. And toxic
stress — extreme, frequent or extended activation of the body’s stress
response without the buffering presence of a supportive adult.
This toxic stress – the kind that comes from living with a physically
and verbally abusive alcoholic parent, for example – damages the
function and structure of a kid’s brain. Toxic stress floods the brain
with stress hormones. When a kid’s in fight, flight or freeze mode,
their thinking brain is offline and doesn’t develop as it should.
Kids experiencing trauma act out. They can’t focus. They can’t sit
still. Or they withdraw. Fight, flight or freeze – that’s a normal and
expected response to trauma. So they can’t learn. Their schools respond
by suspending or expelling them, which further traumatizes them.
READ THIS ARTICLE
A shorter version of this story appears in the July-August 2016 issue of Health Progress.
We have published on the ACE Study here on this blog. Use the search bar for more... Trace
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.