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The National Child Traumatic Stress Network

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The National Child Traumatic Stress Network Ellen Gerrity, Ph.D. Associate Director and Senior Policy Advisor National Center for Child Traumatic Stress – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The National Child Traumatic Stress Network


1
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network
  • Ellen Gerrity, Ph.D.
  • Associate Director and Senior Policy Advisor
  • National Center for Child Traumatic Stress
  • Associate Professor, Department of Psychiatry and
    Behavioral Sciences
  • Duke University Medical Center
  • Mental Health America Webinar
  • Upstream Services A Response to Sandy Hook
  • April 4, 2013

2
Child Traumatic Stressas a Public Health
Problem
  • Two of every three children will witness or
    experience a traumatic event before the age of 16
    (Copeland et al., 2007).
  • One in five children experience some form of
    child maltreatment (Finkelhor et al., 2009)
  • 3.3 million children reported to child protective
    services in 2008 (CDC, 2010).

3
What is traumatic stress?
  • Exposure to events that involve threats of
    injury, death, or danger where intense terror,
    anxiety, and helplessness is experienced
  • Can occur via direct experience or witnessing
    event, or hearing about an event
  • Reactions vary with age, but even very young
    children experience intense reactions

4
Variety of Traumatic Events
  • Trauma may be embedded in daily life, may be
    chronic or acute event
  • Child abuse and maltreatment
  • Domestic violence
  • Community violence and criminal victimization
  • Sexual assault
  • Medical trauma
  • Traumatic loss and bereavement
  • Accidents/fires
  • Natural disasters
  • War/Terrorism/Political Violence

5
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6
Common Symptoms of Traumatic Stress
  • Children may suffer severe emotional and
    developmental consequences from exposure to
    trauma and violence including
  • Sleep problems, including nightmares
  • Intrusive thoughts or flashbacks
  • Numbing of emotions
  • Avoidance of reminders of trauma
  • Anger and irritability
  • Poor concentration
  • Depressive symptoms
  • Anxiety and behavior problems

7
Long-Term Consequences ofTrauma Exposure During
Childhood
  • Without Effective Treatment
  • Serious adult psychiatric difficulties, including
    depression, anxiety disorders, and suicidal
    behaviors
  • Overutilization of medical services
  • ACES study - 4 or more childhood traumas may
    result in risk behaviors, health consequences,
    shortened lifespan

8
Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (ACES)
Felitti et al. 1998
9
National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN)
  • The mission of the National Child Traumatic
    Stress Network (NCTSN) is to raise the standard
    of care and improve access to services for
    traumatized children, their families and
    communities throughout the United States.

10
National Child Traumatic Stress Network
  • Funded in 2000 (Childrens Health Act)
  • Rapid Change (9/11/Increased Growth/Cutbacks)
  • Innovative Collaborative Network Structure
  • UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child
    Traumatic Stress (Category I)
  • 22 Intervention Development and Evaluation
    Centers (Category II)
  • 56 Community Treatment and Service Centers
    (Category III)
  • 90 Affiliate (formerly funded) members

11
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12
NCTSN Scope
  • Trauma mission includes all trauma types, all
    service systems, all professional disciplines,
    all ages, and a strong cultural and family
    perspective throughout activities.
  • Includes a wide range of traumatic experiences,
    including physical and sexual abuse domestic,
    school, and community violence natural
    disasters, terrorism, or military family
    challenges and life-threatening injury and
    illness.

13
NCTSN Activities
  • Range of activities including intervention
    development and adaptation training in many
    forms (Learning Collaborative systems change,
    in-person, web-based) product development
    public awareness evaluation and data analysis
    policy work and service delivery
  • Far-reaching family and consumer program at all
    levels of the program
  • Embedded cultural competence and translations
    work throughout the development of products and
    training approaches
  • Strong collaborative model

14
How is NCTSN making a difference?
  • Over 350,000 children served through direct
    contact improvements after treatment and
    services
  • Hundreds of thousands of professionals trained
  • Over 40 evidence-based treatments and promising
    practices developed
  • Over 200 products for parents/caregivers, youth,
    professionals, general public, policymakers,
    media
  • Network response to national crises, including
    Sandy Hook

15
AccountabilityNCTSN Core Data Set on gt14,000
Children
  • Diverse group of children with complex histories
    and problems 77 reporting exposure to more
    than one trauma type
  • Developmental issues are important to trauma and
    recovery
  • Notable functional impairments and clinical
    diagnoses (PTSD, depression, anxiety, academic
    problems)
  • Like ACES, of traumas are associated with
    serious outcomes
  • High rates of service utilization (child welfare,
    special education, mental health) prior to
    entering treatment - opportunities for early
    intervention
  • Effectiveness of the NCTSN Childrens problems
    improve with treatment

16
You dont shoot at children.
17
NCTSN Sandy Hook Community Support
  • Network mobilization
  • Death notification
  • Crisis Center staffing/Crisis Hotline training
  • Governors Commission/School District support
  • Sandy Hook students and teachers/Other schools
  • Trauma Resources (posted at http//www.nctsn.org/t
    rauma-types/terrorism), including Psychological
    First Aid for Schools
  • Federal and State policymaker support
  • Healthcare community coordination and training
  • Preparedness/Evidence-based practices
  • Long term planning

18
For more information about the NCTSNand what
was presented today
  • Ellen Gerrity, PhD
  • 301-379-2145
  • ellen.gerrity_at_duke.edu
  • www.nctsn.org
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