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A Novel Partnership Disrupts the Norm in Early Childhood Education and Pediatric Health Care

Children living in poverty in the United States in 2016 face a devastating combination of psychological problems. Their neighborhoods are often violent. They have no place to get healthy food. It is not safe to play outside, even on playgrounds. The children who grow up in this environment, not surp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Current problems in pediatric and adolescent health care 2017-09, Vol.47 (9), p.213-216
Main Authors: Dowd, M. Denise, Lantos, John D.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Children living in poverty in the United States in 2016 face a devastating combination of psychological problems. Their neighborhoods are often violent. They have no place to get healthy food. It is not safe to play outside, even on playgrounds. The children who grow up in this environment, not surprisingly, have many adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). ACEs cause toxic stress. Toxic stress leads to long-term physical and psychological problems. For many pediatricians, children’s hospitals, civic leaders, and public health officials, it is difficult to know how to intervene. While the science on causation is indisputable, there are fewer data about treatment. We know that intervention should start early, but the types of interventions that are being proposed require extensive collaboration between social services, health care, and education. Such collaborations require a new sort of cooperation among professionals in disciplines that have not traditionally worked closely together. But they need to start. No one group will be able to solve this problem. This issue of Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent Health Care essentially provides a case study of one community’s attempt to develop such a collaboration.
ISSN:1538-5442
1538-3199
DOI:10.1016/j.cppeds.2017.07.006