Exploring Solutions

“To be free is to be capable of thinking one’s own thoughts - not the thoughts merely of the body, or of society, but thoughts generated by one’s deepest, most original, most essential and spiritual self, one’s individuality.”

- Rudolf Steiner

How can we reclaim our own identity so that true healing can begin--the healing of our body-mind, our communities, as well as the healing of the Earth?

How can we prevent the impact of ACEs, or rather, prevent ACEs from the start?

“It is our moral responsibility and the most important investment our communities can make, to protect our children from the life-long harms of toxic stress from adverse childhood experience.”

Building resilience and breaking the endless cycle of culturally promoted addictive behaviors are the necessary steps to provide a safe, secure, and loving environment for the child. Any child that is impacted by diverse environments, will depend greatly on a trauma-informed school and community in order to have healthy life potential.

“Greater trauma-informed care and peer-support services are needed to break down barriers to care and facilitate recovery. The lifespan of an individual with serious mental illness is likely to be 20-28 years shorter than the general population due to underlying health conditions such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease.”

— Dr. Jei Africa, former director of Behavioral Health and Recovery Services BHRS, Marin County.

What is Trauma-Informed Care, TIC?

 

Definition of trauma: the most commonly referenced definition is from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA): “Individual trauma results from an event, series of events, or set of circumstances that is experienced by an individual as physically or emotionally harmful or life threatening and that has lasting adverse effects on the individual’s functioning and mental, physical, social, emotional, or spiritual well-being.”

Trauma-Informed Care (TIC) seeks to:

  • Realize the widespread impact of trauma and understand paths for recovery.

  • Recognize the signs and symptoms of trauma in patients, families, and staff.

  • Integrate knowledge about trauma into policies, procedures, and practices.

  • Actively avoid re-traumatization.

By adopting trauma-informed approaches to care, health care systems and providers can help mitigate the health risks, improve health outcomes for children and adults who have experienced trauma, and reduce costs inside and outside the health care system. 

A non-trauma-informed system punishes and blames your adult actions and asks, ‘what’s wrong with you?’ A trauma-informed provider will hold you accountable for your adult actions, but give you space and time to process ‘what happened to you?’ without adding guilt and more trauma.

For more info about TIC, visit:

Key Ingredients for Successful Trauma-Informed Care Implementation

Trauma-informed care: What it is, and why it’s important

Trauma-Informed Care Champions: From Treaters to Healers

Perspectives from MDs’

 

“Trying to implement trauma-specific clinical practices without first implementing trauma-informed organizational culture change is like throwing seeds on dry land.”

— Sandra Bloom, MD, Creator of the Sanctuary Model

“The science is clear: early adversity dramatically affects health across a lifetime… this is treatable, this is beatable. The single most important thing that we need today is the courage to look this problem in the face and say this is real, and this is all of us. I believe that we are the movement.”

— Dr. Nadine Burke, MD, Former Surgeon General

“Trauma-informed primary care can transform the caregiving experience of providers from being treaters to being healers.”

— Eddy Machtinger, MD, Director of Women’s HIV Program UCSF

Building a Culture of Compassion

We can learn a lot from the beautiful South-African wisdom, such as Ubuntu, a Nguni Bantu term meaning “humanity”, which is also translated as “I am because we are” (or, as the Xhosa refer to it, the way in which each person’s humanity is interwoven with the humanity of others, a philosophy that expresses belief in a universal bond), as well as from the Maasai’s values, “And how are the children?”, referring to the wellbeing of the children as the true strength of a community.

“Ubuntu means that if we can see everyone as connected to us, we will never be able to dehumanize others or treat them as without any worth. By embracing ubuntu, we live in hope of overcoming division and becoming stronger together in a world where the wise build bridges.”

— Everyday Ubuntu, by Mungi Ngomane

What are the steps needed to change, besides the desire to change?

Awareness is the key to change. We need to be aware of our trauma history (ACEs) and how that shapes one’s own patterns, beliefs, and conditioning that contribute to the problems (stigma.) Next, it’s important to understand the collective traumas and conditions that cause our society’s brokenness at large.

“Ubuntu does not mean that people should not address themselves. The question therefore is, what are you going to do in order to enable the community around you, and enable it to improve? There are important things in life. And if you can do that, you have done something very important.”

— Nelson Mandela

Action Steps for Communities:

What you can do about ACEs, how to prevent the negative impacts, and how to build resilience.

How to Build Resilience

Here are a few strategies you can use to help to build resilience or mitigate the effect of ACES, to help educate communities and encourage local leaders to take action. (Adapted from the Facilitator’s Guide to Resilience by Prevent Child Abuse/KPJR Films.)

Recommended media: Resilience: The Biology of Stress and the Science of Hope

 

Strategy: Change the question.

 

Neuroscience research shows how the brain is constructed through an ongoing process that begins prenatally and continues into our twenties. While ACEs undermine this development and negatively affect the foundation of the brain, resilience can help repair these structural problems and allow a person to “bounce back” from the trauma or adversity they had experienced. The ACEs study shows how changing the conversation when a child is acting out from “what’s wrong with you” to “what happened to you and how can we help fix it?” is a powerful tool. The presence of compassionate teachers, caring coaches, or other adult mentors can help build resilience.

 

Strategy: Recognizing systemic racism contributes to toxic stress.

 

While the results of the original Resilience study were groundbreaking, and incredibly valuable, many racial justice advocates have noted the research tended to focus on middle class, college-educated, white populations. Looking at Resilience with a racial equity lens is also necessary to fully understand the impacts or systemic racism in regards to childhood trauma.

 

Strategy: Recognizing toxic stress as the largest public health issue of our generation.

 

ACEs can have long-term effects on our bodies and lifelong health. When we equip our children and families with the tools they need to overcome ACEs, we can reduce the costs that future generations incur for health care. Eliminating toxic stress among children would profoundly impact on the health and well-being of individuals and entire populations and lower health care costs.

Strategy: Building critical collaborations.

 

The consequences of ACEs cuts across professional disciplines, personal relationships and all socioeconomic demographics. Creating trauma-informed agencies and disciplines to work in collaboration will give us a better chance of improving child and family well-being overall.

 

Strategy: Promoting safe, stable, nurturing relationships & environments.

 

Caring adults and stable environments are necessary for a child’s healthy development and for building resilience. Safe, stable, nurturing relationships between children and their parents or caregivers act to buffer the effects of toxic stress and other ACEs. If parents are struggling, other adults – like teachers or coaches – can be present to provide the safe, stable, nurturing relationships that a child needs. PTAs can also invest in supporting and promoting policies and providing programs that strengthen families.

 

Strategy: Preventing inter-generational transmission of toxic stress.

 

To create good outcomes for children we need to support adults. Resilience makes very clear the inter-generational effects associated with ACEs and trauma. What a parent teaches their children will get passed on to their children’s children. We need businesses, churches and synagogues, PTAs and other civic organization and community advocates to work together on programs to support families who are dealing with trauma that impacts children.

Strategy: Promoting hope.

 

If you watched the film Resilience, you heard one clear message – there is always hope! Science shows the effects of ACEs do not have to be permanent. Different disciplines, agencies and people can come together and make a difference in the lives of trauma- impacted children. Get educated and then get involved in helping our children and our community be stronger and healthier.

For more information, read “Preventing ACEs in order to improve US health”, first-ever CDC analysis, Nov 5, 2019.

“What would our society look like if the foundational purpose of school was to foster collective well-being? In other words: imagine what might happen to the mental health and overall health in our communities, if every school environment was built—structurally and systemically—to prioritize positive relationships, develop social-emotional learning skills, build a sense of belonging, and explicitly teach our students about mental health, stress responses, and resilience?”

Resources for Healing Trauma & Building Inner Resilience.

“Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing, and right-doing, there is a field. I will meet you there.”

- Rumi