The Brain Story Certification: Module 11

Module 11: ACEs, Part B – Using the Science of ACEs in Practice

 

Excerpt from “The Progressive Nature of Adverse Childhood Experiences: Building Self-Healing Communities” Robert Anda, MD, MS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  • Systems are well-intentioned, but they do fit well with the impacts of adversity.
  • More likely to fail a grade with 3 or more aces (2.5x)
  • Findings of the prevalence of various ACES scores to fit across many different regions.
  • Often is a one-size-fits-all approach in schools, not recognizing the impacts of trauma in schools.
  • Schools have a role to play in addressing trauma.
  • Impacts on felonies and reoffences
  • 70% have some type of DSM diagnosis – with 72% of those individuals have co-occurring substance use disorders.
  • Poverty is an ACE and it creates an environment where ACES can take place.
  • Many are disabled to the point that they are unable to work.
  • Early trauma and stress lead to child development that has impact on the brain function, which has an effect on mental health and developmental delays.
  • Do children have ADD/ADHD or childhood PTSD?
  • Into adulthood, the adversity remains, creating parents who enter a cycle for adversity in the next generation.

Excerpt from “What Are ACEs?” Vincent Felitti, MD Kaiser Permanente

  • Be watchful for sexual abuse, humiliation, incest, rape, and childhood brutality – chronic depression/anxiety, living with chronic alcoholic/substance users.
  • Questionnaires are an excellent way to get the information for what is needed to be a good interviewer for gaining formation.
  • Understand the primary problem to which addiction is the underlying solution
  • Focus on supportive group work
  • Provide long-term support.
  • Lengthy questionnaires with comprehensive history – looking at unconventional questions.
  • Trauma-oriented approach – 11% reduction in doctor office visits in the subsequent year
  • Biopsychosocial evaluation – 35% reduction in doctor office visits in the subsequent year.
  • Routinely seek a history of adverse childhood experiences from all participants by questionnaire.
  • Acknowledge the client’s reality
  • Use existing systems to help with current problems.
  • Develop systems for primary prevention.

Excerpt from “Using the ACE Questionnaire in Practice” Rahil Briggs, PsyD Healthy Steps at Montefiore

  • Current assessments ACES, ASQ: SE, PHQ-9
  • Do universal screening, assessment, treatment, and referral of infant and caregiver mental health.
  • Have a good education for providers
  • Provide on-site education
  • A lot of the interventions of pediatrics are through the parent – the same logic applies to work with parents in this capacity.
  • Annual review of ACES with child/parent
  • Parents’ own ACES score is a good indicator for the child.
  • See what toxic stress may look like for the child.
  • Link of ACES and adverse health factors.
  • Healthy emotional/social development refers to the child’s ability to experience/manage/express the full range of positive and negative emotions.
  • Develop close, satisfying relationships with other children and adults, and actively explore the environment and learn—this aids in school readiness.
  • ASQ: SE (3-60 months) – personal-social domains, 8 colour-coded sections
  • Co-management of well-child visits, baby and me group, home visits, and adult mental health services.
  • Has implications for emergency room visits.
  • Those with an early exit from programming tended to have depression and/or less education.
  • If the parent had abuse in their life, the child has a higher risk of increase ACES and developmental impacts.
  • “Healthy Steps” serves as a moderator between intergenerational transmission of ACES – further research needed.

Excerpt from “Using the ACE Questionnaire in Practice” Rahil Briggs, PsyD Healthy Steps at Montefiore

  • Universally asking questions of questions
  • Need to be provided to primary care providers. Confidentiality and consent for access can be discussed with the client.
  • Normalize the use and place it in the context of whole-person healthcare.

Excerpt from “Using the ACE Questionnaire in Practice” Rahil Briggs, PsyD Healthy Steps at Montefiore

  • Adult cost savings are more money-saving in prevention than child mental health in the short-term. In the long-term, the cost-savings of interventions for children.
  • Can use ACES can be a strengths-based approach – how do we keep the ACES score at a 1?
  • Integrate mental health workers in the primary care network.

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