early childhood adversity opportunities to address toxic stress
TRANSCRIPT
Early Childhood AdversityOpportunities to Address Toxic Stress
Indicators highly associated with the incidence of toxic stress, trauma, and the resulting conditions
•Ohio population 11.5 million •7th most populous state in the US
•Approximately 20% of households have children under the age of 18
•6.2% are under the age of five•Nearly one in four children in Ohio live in households
with incomes less than the Federal poverty level•Close to half live in poverty or near poverty•Poverty is the single best predictor of child abuse and
neglect
Indicators highly associated with the incidence of toxic stress, trauma, and the resulting conditions
Social emotional Children in Single Parent Households
• Approximately 10 percent of young children suffer from emotional and behavioral challenges that impair their ability to learn
• The incidence among economically disadvantaged young children is two or three times as high as their more affluent peers
• In Ohio, almost six in 10 marriages end in divorce leaving 37% of children living in single-family households
• The proportion of infants born to single mothers is highest among Blacks at 78%, compared with 58% among Hispanics and 33% among Whites demonstrating a racial disparity
Indicators highly associated with the incidence of toxic stress, trauma, and the resulting conditions
Child Abuse and Neglect Children in Single Parent Households
• In 2010, Ohio had 139,079 total referrals for child abuse and neglect among children under 18
• 833,947 of those children determined victims of abuse or neglect, a rate of 12.5 per 1,000 children
• Of these children, 47.4% were neglected, 39.2% were physically abused, and 18.5% were sexually abused
• In Ohio, almost six in 10 marriages end in divorce leaving 37% of children living in single-family households
• The proportion of infants born to single mothers is highest among Blacks at 78%, compared with 58% among Hispanics and 33% among Whites demonstrating a racial disparity
Indicators highly associated with the incidence of toxic stress, trauma, and the resulting conditions
Maternal and Child Health Indicators
• Ohio’s infant mortality rate was 7.87 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2011 compared to national rate of 6.05
• Black infant mortality rate was 15.8, more than twice the white rate of 6.3
• Ohio ranked #38 among the states for white infant mortality, #47 for overall infant mortality, and #49 for black infant mortality
• Black babies are more likely to die within the first year of life even when controlling for social and economic factors
• Metropolitan and Appalachian counties have higher rates of infant mortality
• Almost one in 10 Ohio children is in foster care, 32% of which are under the age of five
• Evidence suggests that children in foster care have higher-than-average delinquency rates, teen birth rates, and lower earnings
• Abuse and neglect is a leading factor in infant and child fatalities
• U.S. Department of Health and Human Services study found that more than 78% of reported child fatalities resulted from
Adversity attributable to . . .Child or Individual Level Parental or Societal Issues
• Owing to traumatic experiences• Delays in development• Disabilities• Chronic diseases• Temperaments• Other unusual physical or
personal traits
• Poverty• Divorce/single parenting• Poor housing• Lack of access to medical or
mental health care• Threat of violence or terrorism
~ OR ~Combination of Both
Childhood Physiologic Stress
Positive Stress
Rare or briefMild to moderate
Social-emotional bufferingBuilds resilience
Tolerable Stress
More frequent or sustainedModerate to severe
Social-emotional bufferingNo sustained changes
Toxic Stress
Frequent or sustainedSevere
Insufficient bufferingSignificant changes
Potentially permanent changes to the brain
Potentially permanent changes to the brain
Altered Learning
Impaired social-emotional, language and
cognitive skills
Altered Behavior
Adaptions to deal withchronic stress
Altered Physiology
Hyper-responsiveor chronically
activated stressresponse
Altered developmental outcomes/altered life-course trajectories
Altered developmental outcomes/altered life-course trajectories
FracturedSocial Networks
Divorce/single parentingSchool failure
PovertyViolence/crime/incarceration
HomelessnessLimited access to physical
and/or behavioralhealthcare
Adoption ofUnhealthy Lifestyles
AlcoholTobacco
Substance abuseSex/promiscuity
Gamblingobesity
Changes in immuneFunction/inflammation
Cardiovascular diseaseDepressionDiabetes Cirrohsis
COPD
Poor health and/or health disparities
Poor health and/or health disparities
Poor health and or health disparities
Non-communicable diseasesEconomic consequencesIntergenerational effect
Home visiting opportunities
High levels of recent adversity and distress are the “new normal”
• If this maternal adversity and distress impairs the mother’s ability to form a safe, stable, and nurturing relationship with her child, the maternal adversity puts the child at risk for toxic stress
• Home visiting with well-trained specialists is an important opportunity to support the capacity of mothers to develop strong, responsive early relationships with their children
• The social emotional buffering afforded by these critical early relationships prevents adversity from becoming toxic
Home visiting opportunitiesHome visits are an important mechanism
• Intervening early to prevent toxic stress
• Proactively build the rudiments of resilience
• Improve the capacity of caregivers to:▫ Promote the safe, stable, and nurturing relationships that buffer toxic
stress▫ Encourage the rudimentary but foundational social-emotional,
language, and cognitive skills that promote resilience and the adoption of healthy, adaptive coping skills
Home visiting in the futureSummary and implications
• Home visiting specialists, much like pediatric medical homes, cannot address early childhood adversity and toxic stress in isolation
• Both are integral elements of a desperately needed public health approach to prevent the intergenerational transfer of toxic stress and disparities in health, education, and economic productivity
• Building the community capacities to support such a public health approach to toxic stress will require unprecedented levels of collaboration and coordination between the healthcare, childcare, early education, early intervention, and home visiting sectors