This study has produced more than 50 articles that look at
the consequences of ACE's.
JANE: Once people learn about
the consequences of ACEs, the effects of toxic stress and that trauma - informed practices and building resilience can create healthy individuals, families, communities and systems, they can never look at a homeless person without seeing an abused child.
Specifically, parents should be screened for current psychosocial issues like intimate partner violence, mental health problems, and substance use, all of which are common distal
consequences of ACEs.
In the past decades, the long - term detrimental
consequences of ACEs on mental health and underlying biological...
Discussion Over the past several decades, there has been much documentation of the detrimental
consequences of ACEs in later adulthood with regard to mental health and physical health outcomes (Felitti et al., 1998).
Not exact matches
Adverse Childhood Experiences (
ACE) Response University
of Albany & Prevent Child Abuse America Seeks to connect research data and its potential for real - world application to prevent adverse childhood experiences and their
consequences through policy and program leadership, community development, and direct practice.
The risks
of ordinary therapy to alienated children not only includes increasing psychological harm but may now include medical / health ramifications in the form
of consequences from what is referred to as Adverse Childhood Experiences (
ACEs).
Adverse biological embedding
of ACEs potentially occurs through inflammatory mechanisms; inflammatory marker alterations are identified as candidate biomarkers for mediating health
consequences.
Reports from the Adverse Childhood Experiences (
ACEs) Study have shown that childhood abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction are strongly associated with many risk factors for IHD, including smoking, obesity, physical inactivity, and depression.5, 6 However, no previous research has provided evidence to link IHD in adulthood as a possible long - term
consequence of childhood trauma.
However, the growing popularity
of screening parents for
ACEs requires consideration
of its benefits and
consequences.
Exposure to multiple and / or prolonged
ACEs directly correlates to serious delays in development and to an alarming range
of health and behavioral
consequences that can continue throughout life.
Reviews the research findings starting with the original
ACE Study, extensions, and the health and social
consequences of accumulated adversity and trauma, distinctly addressed.