The impact of physical abuse on a child’s life can be far-reaching. It is especially devastating when a parent, the person a child depends on for protection and safety, becomes a danger. Some children develop traumatic stress reactions.
Search
Your privacy is important to us. Listed below are the guidelines we follow to ensure the privacy of all visitors to NCTSN.org.
Gives details about the growing number of girls in the juvenile justice.
Describes integrating behavioral health services in rural and urban Native American communities, outlines the story of healing for three survivors of child sex trafficking, and other highlights.
Presents an overview of the issues of traumatic stress among hard of heating children or children with hearing loss.
Presents a process for threat assessment and management in an educational setting.
Explains how to understand implementation research.
Features Youth Task Force members discussing Never Give Up, a video that offers hope for their peers who have experienced complex trauma.
The Youth Self-Report (YSR) is a widely used child-report measure that assesses problem behaviors along two “broadband scales”: Internalizing and Externalizing.
Enhancing cultural competence and encouraging cultural humility are essential to increasing access and improving the standard of care for traumatized children, families, and communities across the nation.