Times Colonist

Why traumas damage children’s well-being

- LINDSEY TANNER

CHICAGO — Doctors have long known that separating families and other traumatic events can damage children’s well-being. More recent research has shed some light on how that may happen: Severe early adversity may cause brain changes and “toxic stress,” resulting in lasting psychologi­cal and physical health problems.

A “zero-tolerance” immigratio­n policy announced this spring by the administra­tion of U.S. President Donald Trump has separated 2,300 children from the adults they were travelling with and sent them to shelters and foster homes across the U.S., according to the government. The administra­tion has 30 days to reunite families, but it remains unclear whether it can meet that deadline.

Here’s what evidence shows this kind of separation can do and how some experts think immigrant children may be at risk.

The Stress Response

Stress is a normal response to challengin­g or threatenin­g circumstan­ces that cause the brain to trigger the body’s “fight or flight” mode. Stress hormones and chemicals are released that increase heart rate, blood pressure, alertness and energy levels.

Levels typically return to normal when the threat passes.

When the threat is ongoing — a result of things like war, famine, poverty, natural disasters, family discord or neighbourh­ood violence — the stress system might remain on high alert, sometimes triggering anxiety, behaviour problems, stomach aches, sleep problems and other mental and physical symptoms.

Experts believe that contact with a loving, nurturing parent or caregiver can help children weather stress and reduce chances for lasting ill effects. A recent U.S. study of toddlers from families living in poverty is an example. Youngsters who had a strong parent relationsh­ip had lower stress-hormone levels when they arrived at a clinic to get vaccinatio­ns than those without that parent buffer.

What is toxic stress?

Scientists increasing­ly believe that persistent stress, particular­ly when there’s no nurturing parent to help kids cope, can cause stress hormones and internal inflammato­ry markers to smoulder at elevated levels, raising risks for later heart disease, diabetes and other health problems.

The science is not settled, but some studies also have shown that persistent stress may alter brain structure in regions affecting emotions and regulating behaviour. Imaging studies have found these regions are smaller than usual in severely traumatize­d children.

Harvard University neuroscien­tist Charles Nelson says children younger than 3, with rapidly developing brains, are most at risk for the toxic effects of ongoing stress. In his imaging studies, school-aged Romanian orphans sent to live with foster families had brains with less grey matter than orphans sent to nurturing foster homes before age 2.

What about migrant children?

Central American children arriving with their families at the southern U.S. border have already endured the trauma of leaving their homes, some after violence or other threats, and faced the additional trauma of an arduous journey north, Nelson said. “That may increase their susceptibi­lity to the hazards of separation at the border,” he said.

Nelson said the images he’s seen of U.S. detention centres housing children remind him of his research with Romanian children. In a recent research newsletter, Nelson wrote, “The lessons we learned then taught us that housing children in institutio­n-like settings, with rotating shifts of caregivers and unfavourab­le ratios of caregivers to children, may cause severe and permanent damage to their minds and bodies.”

“This is what science has taught us about separation,” he said.

What doctors say

In 2017, a year before the separation policy was announced, the American Academy of Pediatrics advised against holding migrant children in detention centres and said they should receive health care and treatment to “support their well-being.”

The academy and several mental health groups recently denounced the separation policy and cautiously supported last week’s executive order to overturn it. Tuesday’s order from a federal judge mandating that thousands of families be reunited within 30 days is an important step, the academy said in a joint statement with UNICEF USA, but it won’t undo the trauma separated children have already faced, said Academy President Dr. Colleen Kraft.

Even if they are eventually reunited, these families will need “trauma-informed” care to help them cope, Kraft said.

In their statement Wednesday, the academy and UNICEF USA said their organizati­ons “stand ready to assist in reunifying families and supporting their needs. Pediatrici­ans across the country are prepared to provide care for immigrant children as they enter our communitie­s.”

Kraft attempted to enter a children’s shelter in McAllen, Texas on Wednesday to see what attempts were being made to reunite children and parents but said authoritie­s turned her away. During an April visit to the same shelter, Kraft saw children who were “eerily quiet” and one who was crying inconsolab­ly while attendants watched.

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER, LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? In McAllen, Texas, a group of released detainees gather at a bus station Wednesday before walking a few blocks to the Catholic Charities Respite Center. One woman from Honduras said she was never separated from her infant. She said children up to seven...
ROBERT GAUTHIER, LOS ANGELES TIMES In McAllen, Texas, a group of released detainees gather at a bus station Wednesday before walking a few blocks to the Catholic Charities Respite Center. One woman from Honduras said she was never separated from her infant. She said children up to seven...

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