Works hard every day to prevent child abuse and neglect before it happens.
Search
Helps young children and their families talk about feelings and worries they may have after experiencing a large-scale fire, like a wildfire.
Helps young children and their families talk about feelings and worries they may have after experiencing a large-scale fire, like a wildfire.
The following resources on LGBTQ Youth were developed by external partners and organizations.
Features Nancy Kassam Adams and Anne Kazak, longtime members of the NCTSN and Co-Directors of the Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress, an NCTSN Category II Center.
Features Alex Barker and Diane Lanni, the first family and young adult partners on the NCTSN Steering Committee.
Este recurso ofrece principios prácticos y accionables que organizaciones y sistemas de servicios para niños puedan implementar en sus continuos esfuerzos para transformarse fundamentalmente en entidades antirracistas e informadas sobre el trauma.
Pediatric medical traumatic stress refers to a set of psychological and physiological responses of children and their families to single or multiple medical events.
Physical abuse occurs when a parent or caregiver commits an act that results in physical injury to a child or adolescent.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer or questioning (LGBTQ) youth experience trauma at higher rates than their straight peers.