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Social work and adverse childhood experiences research : implications for practice and health policy Heather Larkin, Vincent J. Felitti & Robert F. Anda

By: Larkin, Heather.
Contributor(s): Felitti, Vincent J | Anda, Robert F.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Social Work in Public Health.Publisher: Informa, 2014Subject(s): CHILDREN | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT | FAMILY SERVICES | HEALTH POLICY | INTERVENTION | SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE | ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES | PREVENTION -- PREVENTION | CHILD ABUSE | UNITED STATESOnline resources: Read abstract In: Social Work in Public Health, 2014, 29(1): 1-16Summary: "This article applies a biopsychosocial perspective, with an emphasis on mind–body coping processes to demonstrate that social work responses to adverse childhood experiences may contribute to improvement in overall health. Consistent with this framework, the article sets forth prevention and intervention response strategies with individuals, families, communities, and the larger society." (from the Abstract)
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Social Work in Public Health, 2014, 29(1): 1-16

"This article applies a biopsychosocial perspective, with an emphasis on mind–body coping processes to demonstrate that social work responses to adverse childhood experiences may
contribute to improvement in overall health. Consistent with this framework, the article sets forth prevention and intervention response strategies with individuals, families, communities, and the larger society." (from the Abstract)