The State of the Art Resilience and Toxic Stress Research: Policy and Practice Implications

Venue

This is a virtual event, accessible online and over the phone. Access instructions will be provided after registration.

Description

The pandemic and the deaths of George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, and others has further highlighted profound racial disparities and unresolved issues of systemic racism in this country.  In this webinar, the broad range of negative mental and physical health outcomes associated with the two ACEs - Adverse Childhood Experiences (e.g., child maltreatment) and Adverse Community Environments (e.g., discrimination) - are reviewed.  Emerging data on the mechanisms by which these experiences can ‘get under the skin’ and transmit risk transgenerationally are discussed. Key factors for promoting resilience and recovery will then be delineated, together with specific policy and practice recommendations. Original webinar date: April 12, 2024. CC.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Delineate the broad range of negative sequelae associated with the two ACEs.
  2. Describe mechanisms by which the ACEs 'get under the skin' to confer risk for deleterious mental and physical health outcomes.
  3. List key factors associated with promoting resilience and recovery.

Presenter

Joan Kaufman, PhD

Dr. Kaufman received her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Yale University where she served on faculty in the Department of Psychiatry from 1998-2015. In 2015 she was recruited to Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Dr. Kaufman’s research was predominantly in the area of childhood trauma, spanned from neurobiology to social policy, and used tools from psychology, genetics, and neuroscience to understand resilience and mechanisms of disease risk associated with early adversity.  Dr. Kaufman left academic medicine in August of 2022.
Continuing Education

Continuing Education

Credits:
3.0 CE
Level:
Any
Production Date:
04/12/2024

Options

Price: $80.00

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