A significant amount of attention, money and resources are
devoted to soldiers who return home after war and experience a host
of issues that fall under the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress
disorder.
Yet according to a leading expert on childhood trauma, the
number of affected veterans is dwarfed by the legions of American
children who are being abused and neglected. Those children, Bessel
van der Kolk told Missoulians last week, experience their own
psychological, emotional and physical trauma on a daily basis. And
they are much the worse for it.
All In The Family | Ideas with Paul Kennedy | CBC Radio - 0 views
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Alcoholism. Respiratory disease. Cancer. Obesity. We're told that these can be the results of genetics, stress and poor nutrition. But in recent years, an extraordinary, retrospective study reveals that childhood abuse may lie at the core of some diseases that show up in middle-aged adults. IDEAS producer Mary O'Connell talks to Dr. Vincent Felitti about the physiological results of psychological trauma.
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The University Of Montana Department Of Psychology is currently offering a treatment for post-trauma nightmares in children. The treatment is for children (ages 8 to 12) who have experienced a trauma and are currently experiencing weekly nightmares. A caregiver's participation is also required. All participants receive monetary compensation.
Contact:
For details please call (406) 243-6684