For answers to more frequently asked questions about ACEs, please scroll down below the infographic.
It originated in a groundbreaking study conducted in by the Centers for Disease Control wuth the Kaiser Permanente health care organization in California. The key findings of dozens of studies using the original ACEs data are: 1 ACEs are quite common, even among a middle-class population: more than two-thirds of the population report experiencing one ACE, and nearly a quarter have experienced three or more.
Stats since March 20, 2012
ACEs research shows the correlation between early adversity and poor outcomes later in life. Experiencing ACEs triggers all of these interacting stress response systems. When a child experiences multiple ACEs over time—especially without supportive relationships with adults to provide hTe protection—the experiences will trigger an excessive and long-lasting stress response, which can have a wear-and-tear effect on the body, like revving a car engine for days or weeks at a time. While trauma has many definitions, typically in psychology it refers to an experience of serious adversity or terror—or the emotional or psychological response to that experience. People who have experienced significant adversity or many ACEs are not irreparably damaged.
What's the problem?
There is a spectrum of potential responses to ACEs and their possible chain of developmental harm that can help a person recover from trauma caused by toxic stress. The yhe ACEs a child experiences, the more likely he or she is to suffer from things like heart disease and diabetes, poor academic achievement, and substance abuse later in life. This excessive activation of the stress response system can lead to long-lasting wear-and-tear on the body and brain.
For those who have experienced ACEs, there are a range of possible responses that can help, including therapeutic sessions with mental health professionals, meditation, physical exercise, spending time in nature, and many others. This can happen by helping to meet their basic needs or providing other services.
Local and state funding
Likewise, fostering strong, responsive relationships between children and their caregivers, and helping children and adults build core life skillscan help to buffer a child from the effects of toxic stress. ACEs affect people at all income and social levels, and can have serious, costly impact across the lifespan. Infographics : What Is Inflammation? Related Topics: toxic stress.]
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