The Relationship between Trauma & Resilience USING DATA TO DRIVE SYSTEM REPONSES TO VIOLENCE Bryan Samuels, Commissioner Administration on Children, Youth.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Being a Resilient Teen Everyone goes through times of stress, disappointments, and difficulty. When hardships and tragedies happen, it can be hard for.
Advertisements

Discuss strategies to build resilience. Resilience programs typically target the promotion of protective factors such as parenting skills, academic tutoring.
Child Development: Theory and Practice 1. Why is child development important? Evidence that social workers have limited training and knowledge about child.
Children, Families and Poverty Ross A. Thompson, Ph.D. Department of Psychology.
Domestic Violence, Parenting, and Behavior Outcomes of Children Chien-Chung Huang Rutgers University.
Renée Wilson-Simmons, DrPH Director National Center for Children in Poverty Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health July 10-11, 2013  Baltimore,
The Impact of Maltreatment on Relationships Bryan Samuels, Commissioner Administration on Children, Youth and Families.
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network Ellen Gerrity, Ph.D. Associate Director and Senior Policy Advisor National Center for Child Traumatic Stress.
Addressing Trauma in Our Communities
The Network To come together to transform the partnerships among families, community and service providers to do everything possible to promote strong,
Introduction to Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families Massachusetts Home Visiting Initiative A Department of Public Health.
Responding to Domestic Violence: CII’s Integrated Wellness Approach to Group Treatment for Adult Survivors and Their Children Leslie Anne Ross, Psy.D.
Using a Protective Factors Framework to Build ECE/CW collaboration Nilofer Ahsan November 2011.
The Massachusetts Early Childhood Linkage Initiative (MECLI) John A. Lippitt, Ph.D. Jack P. Shonkoff, M.D. Institute for Child, Youth, and Family Policy.
The When, How, and Where to of Trauma Screening, Assessment, and Referral.
Resilience and its Relationship with the 5-Step Method Professor Richard Velleman Emeritus Professor of Mental Health Research, University of Bath, UK.
Common Ground One Approach, Many Adaptations Juanita Blount-Clark August, 2011.
Taking a Trauma First Approach in Policy, Programs, and Practice Bryan Samuels, Commissioner Administration on Children, Youth and Families.
REACTIVE ATTACHMENT DISORDER. CONTROVERSY-In General  Little evidence to support DX or TX.  Comorbidity with other Axis I & II is so significant that.
Define resilience. Resilience Rutter (1990) Resilience can be seen as maintaining adaptive functioning in spite of serious risk factors. Wyman et al.
Bryan Samuels, Executive Director The Intersection of Safety, Permanency and Child Well-Being Bryan Samuels, Executive Director.
September Module 6 What have we learned? Informing child welfare.
Mental Health is a Public Health Issue: What I Learned from Early Childhood.   Presented by  Charlie Biss 
Caring Communities Can Help Reduce ACEs. Mental Health “Mental health is indispensable to well-being, relationships, and contribution to the community.
Research and Health Utilization Around Conduct Problems Scott T. Ronis, Ph.D. Department of Psychology University of New Brunswick ________________________________________.
Substance Use Disorders in Adolescence Chapter 15 Sandra A. Brown, Kristin Tomlinson, and Jennifer Winward.
that keep families strong
MOVING UPSTREAM By BUILDING PROTECTIVE FACTORS
Infant Mental Health PSY 417. Infant Mental Health ► Risk verus Infant Mental Health.
Early Childhood Adversity
A Shared Developmental Approach: Meeting Well-being Needs and Addressing Trauma CLARE ANDERSON, DEPUTY COMMISSIONER ADMINISTRATION ON CHILDREN, YOUTH AND.
Benzies et al., 2007 Screening for Family Needs The Many Faces of Childhood Well-Being: The Early Years (Two to Six) Edmonton, AB November 30, 2007.
The Contribution of Behavioral Health to Improving Conditions for Learning and Healthy Development David Osher, Ph.D. American Institutes for Research.
Bullying and Children’s Rights: It’s not Just about Safety Debra Pepler York University & The Hospital for Sick Children.
Understanding the Impact of Trauma on the Developing Brain Dr. Valerie Alloy & Andrea McMahon.
What Have We Learned? What Should We Do? Ross A. Thompson, Ph.D. Department of Psychology University of California, Davis The Developmental.
Strategies for Supporting Young Children Experiencing Homelessness in the Early Childhood Classroom.
DCFS School Readiness Planning Initiative Insure that all young children in the system start school ready to learn –Physically –Socially –Emotionally.
PBIS and Conscious Discipline: Bully Prevention Ashley Hedrick and Mary Martinez June 10, 2015.
Coordinating Council on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Quarterly Meeting – October 21, 2011 Bryan Samuels, Commissioner Administration on.
NASMHPD RESILIENCY in the Public Health Framework CYFD call Tuesday, October 26, 2010 noon-1:00 EST
Mission: Protect the Vulnerable, Promote Strong and Economically Self- Sufficient Families, and Advance Personal and Family Recovery and Resiliency. Charlie.
Kindergarten Readiness: The Social and Emotional Perspective November 9, 2010 Lauren Wiley, M.Ed. Early Childhood Mental Health Consultant
HNC Social Care Psychology for Care.
Resources for Supporting Students with Trauma
“All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today.” - Proverb.
1 Executive Summary of the Strategic Plan and Proposed Action Steps January 2013 Healthy, Safe, Smart and Strong 1.
Blaustein & Kinniburgh, 2010; Kinniburgh & Blaustein, 2005.
313: Managing the Impact of Traumatic Stress on the Child Welfare Professional.
Center For The Study of Social Policy’s Strengthening Families A Protective Factors Framework Strengthening Families Goodwin College.
Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children Presentation P28 Childhood Neglect: Improving Outcomes for Children Presentation Understanding cumulative.
© Raija-Leena Punamäki 2007 Psychosocial Preventive Interventions among War Traumatized Families: Infat and Adolescent Development Raija-Leena Punamaki.
Resiliency, Protective Processes, Promotion & Community Chapter 7.
Mental Health Odhrán Allen. Mental Health It is “a state of well-being in which the individual: It is “a state of well-being in which the individual:
The Problem: Trauma Exposure  More than two thirds of Americans have experienced a significant traumatic event by age 16  More than one third have been.
SAOL, March, 2016 The impact of trauma on children Rosaleen McElvaney
Early & Appropriate Interventions for Child Abuse Prevention Nicole Huff, LCSW Chief Programs Officer ESCAPE Family Resource Center.
Transforming Global Maternal, Adolescent, and Child Health: From Research Evidence to Practice and Policy Assessing the Child in Developmental Context.
Trauma-Informed Practice eLearning (draft) 5/27/16.
Understanding Infant Mental Health Summers & Chazan-Cohen, Chapter 1.
Scottsdale Unified School District Report February 8, 2017
Overcoming Childhood Trauma: Long-Term Effects of Early Maltreatment
2017 Conference on Child Welfare and the Courts
PSYCHOSOCIAL CARE AND SUPPORT FOR CHILDREN IN EMERGENCIES
Introduction Defining a Trauma Informed Child Welfare System
MORES Mobile Outreach Response Engagement Stabilization Service
Child Development: Theory and Practice
A Shared Developmental Approach: Meeting Well-Being Needs and Addressing Trauma to Promote Healthy Development CLARE ANDERSON, DEPUTY COMMISSIONER ADMINISTRATION.
Resilience and its Relationship with the 5-Step Method
Childhood Trauma and Its Impact on College and Career Readiness
Presentation transcript:

The Relationship between Trauma & Resilience USING DATA TO DRIVE SYSTEM REPONSES TO VIOLENCE Bryan Samuels, Commissioner Administration on Children, Youth and Families

November 1, Forum on Youth Violence Prevention COMMUNITY VIOLENCE/STUDENT SHOOTING AND CHILD WELFARE CASES

Impact of Trauma on Development The developmental stage of the child at the onset of traumatic exposure will influence the type and severity of the consequences. 1 Ongoing exposure to trauma can lead to chronically high or low levels of cortisol in the brain, associated with significant health problems and neurological damage later in life. 2 The ability to develop secure attachments and form healthy relationships can be compromised by the impact of experiences of violence and trauma. 3 The identification of emotions and the capacity to express and modulate them safely can become impaired in children and youth who have experienced complex trauma. – “Children who are unable to consistently regulate internal experience may turn to alternative strategies, including dissociative coping (e.g., chronic numbing of emotional experience), avoidance of affectively laden situations, including positive experiences, and/or use of behavioral strategies (e.g., substance use). Those children who are unable to find consistent strategies to assist them in modulation of emotion may present as emotionally labile, demonstrating extreme responses to minor stressors, with rapid escalation and difficulty self-soothing. 4 ” IMPACTS: How children understand their experiences Whether developmental tasks are being achieved on schedule How children cope with adverse experiences The availability of supports to buffer against negative outcomes November 1, 2011Forum on Youth Violence Prevention 3 1. Frederico, MM; Jackson, AL; & Black, CM. (2005). Reflections on Complexity: The 2004 Summary Evaluation of Take Two. Bundoora, Victoria: School of Social Work and Social Policy, La Trobe University. 2. Perry BD; Pollard RA; Blakely TL; Baker WL; & Vigilante D. (1995). Childhood trauma, the neurobiology of adaptation and use ‐ dependent development of the brain: How ‘states’ become ‘traits.’ Infant Mental Health Journal. 16:271 ‐ Cook, A, Blaustein; M, Spinazzola, J; & van der Kolk, B. (Eds.). (2003). Complex Trauma in Children and Adolescents: White Paper from the National Child Traumatic Stress Network Complex Trauma Task Force. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA, USDHHS). 4.Ibid.

Lessons Learned about Resilience 1.Resilience is not a single trait or process—many attributes and processes are involved. 2.There are multiple pathways to resilience. 3.It is easy to make the mistake of blaming the victim when resilience does not occur, if one assumes that resilience arises only from internal capacities. 4.The evidence strongly implicates the roles of transactional processes and adaptive capacity arising external to the organism in resilience. 5.There are no magic bullets for producing resilience. 6.There are no invulnerable children. 7.There are levels of risk and adversity so overwhelming that resilience does not occur and recovery is extraordinarily rare or impossible. Masten, AS & Obradovi ć, J. (2006). Competence and resilience in development. Resilience in Children. 1094:13. November 1, Forum on Youth Violence Prevention

Understanding Experiences Developmental Tasks Coping Strategies Environmental Buffers Protective mechanisms can serve in multiple functions; what is important is how they contribute to healing and recovery Dimensions through which experiences of trauma and violence impact children in the short- and long-terms Locus of interventions to promote social and emotional functioning to facilitate healing and recovery Protective Mechanisms Social and Emotional Well-Being November 1, Forum on Youth Violence Prevention Promoting Well-Being Understanding Experiences: Dimensions through which experiences of trauma and violence impact children in the short- and long-terms Protective Mechanisms: Protective mechanisms can serve in multiple functions; what is important is how they contribute to healing and recovery Healing & Recovery: Locus of interventions to promote social and emotional functioning to facilitate healing and recovery

Promoting Resilience Adapted from: Lippman, LH; Moore, KA & McIntosh, H. (2011). Positive indicators of child well-being: A conceptual framework, measures, and methodological issues. Applied Research in Quality of Life. Accessed on August 16, November 1, 2011Forum on Youth Violence Prevention 6

Promoting Resilience (Cont’d.) Adapted from: Lippman, LH; Moore, KA & McIntosh, H. (2011). Positive indicators of child well-being: A conceptual framework, measures, and methodological issues. Applied Research in Quality of Life. Accessed on August 16, November 1, 2011Forum on Youth Violence Prevention 7