Pediatricians can help build resilience in both children and
teachers to counter the effects of traumatic childhood experiences,
poverty and violence, Dr. Kavitha Selvaraj of the Ann and Robert H.
Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago writes in the journal
Pediatrics.
“Before I was a pediatrician, I was a teacher, and in my clinic I
hear personal stories about people’s children and families that
remind me of stories I heard from my students,” Selvaraj told
Reuters Health.
In the essay, Selvaraj writes about her own experiences as a teacher
in a stressed environment. A seventh-grade biology and health
teacher in an underserved neighborhood, she wanted to serve as a
role model and inspiration. But in her first year as a teacher, she
felt extremely underprepared to handle behavioral outbursts -
including being punched in the face by a student - and felt like she
spent little time teaching.

Selvaraj nearly quit that year, but didn’t. The students began to
trust her, and they began visiting her classroom outside class time.
One confided that he was often hungry and found it hard to
concentrate at school. Another said he had nightmares after
witnessing a fatal shooting in his neighborhood. Another said she
was sexually abused by her stepbrother. Selvaraj was able to help
these kids with food pantry referrals, conferences with parents and
school counselors and calls to the Department of Child and Family
Services, respectively.
“Although I do not recommend getting punched in the face to help
children thrive, the chain of events that unraveled,” she writes,
“showed me that as a teacher and a caring adult figure, I was in a
unique position to limit the long-term effects of toxic stress.”
These adverse childhood experiences, also known as ACEs, and early
exposure to poverty can lead to toxic stress in children and
negative health problems later in life. They also contribute to a
higher chance of heart attack, stroke, mental health problems and
substance abuse.
“I didn’t realize then what I know now - that there are so many
different people who can help children with these stressors,”
Selvaraj said in a telephone interview. “As a teacher, I never
dreamt of talking to a pediatrician. Why didn’t anyone tell me I
didn’t have to do this alone?”
Pediatricians and teachers can team up to ask students, “What is
happening to you?” rather than focusing on, “Why are you behaving
this way?”, she said. Children with toxic stress have complex
educational, behavioral and medical needs that can’t be handled by
one industry or one person.

[to top of second column] |

Doctor-school collaborations have been successful for children with
development disorders, ADHD, undernutrition, obesity, food allergies
and asthma. Toxic stress can be added to that list, Selvaraj said.
Addressing teacher stress, too, can help with burnout and teacher
turnover.
She suggests giving teachers a professional support network,
strategies to de-escalate charged situations and ways to manage
behavior in children with high ACE scores.
“We have worked closely with the American Academy of Pediatrics
Association and leadership to create best practices on bully and
peer victimization assessment,” said Dorothy Espelage, a psychology
professor at the University of Florida in Gainesville, who wasn’t
involved in the study.
Several resources on the American Academy of Pediatrics website,
AAP.org, give parents, teachers and doctors information about
bullying, violence and toxic stress in students.
“We encourage pediatricians to ask about peer relations and stresses
at school during wellness checkups,” Espelage told Reuters Health by
email.
Selvaraj suggests promoting “the 7 C’s” of resilience: competence,
confidence, connection, character, contribution, coping and control.
This includes teaching emotional self-regulation strategies such as
meditation and mindfulness in both the classroom and clinic, she
said. Doctors and teachers can also talk regularly about at-risk
children and their progress.
In a current study at four hospitals in Chicago, Selvaraj and fellow
pediatricians are screening students for signs of toxic stress and
unmet social needs such as food, housing, childcare, legal services
and monthly bills.

“Doctors often get nervous about asking these questions, and we need
a massive effort to get everyone on the same page,” she said.
“Partnerships won’t have power without parents, pediatricians and
teachers involved. It’s a triad of support for our children.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2CoXfQP Pediatrics, online January 1, 2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |