Parent Psychotherapy doesn’t just heal emotional wounds — it repairs a biological process that could benefit kids for life.
Children who experience traumatic events may show subtle but measurable differences in how their brains process attention and control impulses, according to a new study published in Neuropsychologia.
Are you able to recognize signs of family abuse or dysfunction and how these childhood experiences may be affecting your ...
Researchers identify molecular markers in children and adolescents, revealing how child maltreatment stress alters DNA, brain development, and mental health Child maltreatment, which includes abuse ...
Decades after a landmark study showed the lasting health effects of such trauma, researchers are finding ways to guard ...
In trauma-impacted families, stress is contagious, but so is calm. Learn how awareness and repair help families slow down.
A University of Sydney-led study published today has found 42 percent of Australian adults - more than eight million people - experienced a traumatic event as children. Those affected have a 50 ...
Most research on the health effects of stress focuses on adults, but a new review looks at how stress uniquely affects children.
Intergenerational and historical trauma courses through the offspring in a family, surfacing in descendants throughout decades, until it is addressed and healing is achieved. The “Woman to Woman ...
When a parent suffered trauma as a child, their kids are affected. Trauma in childhood echoes through generations, according to new research that could have implications for thousands of migrant ...
A study conducted by the Maccabident Research Institute found that ongoing national security tensions led to significant changes in the dental and skeletal development of children and teens.