Not exact matches
According to neuroscientists who study the
impact of stress on child development, the common thread
among neglect, abuse, and other forms
of trauma is that they communicate to the developing brains
of infants and children that their environment is unstable, unpredictable, and chaotic.
Brain
trauma among football players (and athletes in other sports such as soccer and ice hockey) may be less the result
of violent collisions that cause concussions as the cumulative effect
of repetitive head
impacts (RHI).
• Assumptions about different cultural groups and how they
impact breastfeeding support • Shoshone and Arapaho tribal breastfeeding traditions shared through oral folklore • Barriers to decreasing health disparities in infant mortality for African Americans • Effects
of inflammation and
trauma on health disparities that result in higher rates
of infant mortality
among minority populations • Barriers to breastfeeding experienced by Black mothers and how lactation consultants can support them more effectively • Social support and breastfeeding self - efficacy
among Black mothers • Decreasing pregnancy, birth, and lactation health disparities in the urban core • Positive changes in breastfeeding rates within the African American community • Grassroots breastfeeding organizations serving African American mothers
Among his initiatives, Dirschberger championed department - wide training that recognizes the
impact of trauma exposure on both residents and staff, and he successfully pushed for better work space and extensive renovations to Social Services facilities, especially in areas that serve the public.
The discovery
of brain pathology through autopsy in former National Football League (NFL) players called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) has raised substantial concern
among players, medical professionals, and the general public about the
impact of repetitive head
trauma.
In response to the pervasive exposure to stress and
trauma, we have developed and previously tested a program
of mindfulness instruction intended to reduce the negative
impacts of stress and toxic stress
among urban youth.
Suicide
among First Nations people is a symptom
of trauma caused by colonisation and its
impacts.
Promoting Resilience and Reducing Secondary
Trauma Among Child Welfare Staff (PDF - 1116 KB) ACS - NYU Children's Trauma Institute Describes a project to mitigate the impact of secondary traumatic stress among child protective staff in New York City, and thereby increase staff job satisfaction, resilience, optimism, self - care and social support, and decrease staff attrition, stress reactivity and bur
Among Child Welfare Staff (PDF - 1116 KB) ACS - NYU Children's
Trauma Institute Describes a project to mitigate the
impact of secondary traumatic stress
among child protective staff in New York City, and thereby increase staff job satisfaction, resilience, optimism, self - care and social support, and decrease staff attrition, stress reactivity and bur
among child protective staff in New York City, and thereby increase staff job satisfaction, resilience, optimism, self - care and social support, and decrease staff attrition, stress reactivity and burnout.
Historical
Trauma Among Urban American Indians: Impact on Substance Abuse and Family Cohesion Wiechelt, Gryczynski, Johnson, & Caldwell (2012) Journal of Loss and Trauma: International Perspectives on Stress and Coping, 17 (4) View Abstract Examines historical trauma in an urban American Indian sample using validated measures of historical loss and associated sym
Trauma Among Urban American Indians:
Impact on Substance Abuse and Family Cohesion Wiechelt, Gryczynski, Johnson, & Caldwell (2012) Journal
of Loss and
Trauma: International Perspectives on Stress and Coping, 17 (4) View Abstract Examines historical trauma in an urban American Indian sample using validated measures of historical loss and associated sym
Trauma: International Perspectives on Stress and Coping, 17 (4) View Abstract Examines historical
trauma in an urban American Indian sample using validated measures of historical loss and associated sym
trauma in an urban American Indian sample using validated measures
of historical loss and associated symptoms.
Based on an exploratory study conducted in Minnesota, this course focuses on the intergenerational transmission
of historical
trauma among AI / AN peoples, specifically focusing on the following issues: identity and the development
of a Cultural Self; the continuing
impact of loss and
trauma; and the ways in which the use
of cultural and spiritual traditions may help community members maintain their sobriety.