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Early childhood adversity, toxic stress, and the impacts of racism on the foundations of health Jack P. Shonkoff, Natalie Slopen and David R. Williams

By: Shonkoff, Jack P.
Contributor(s): Slopen, Natalie | Williams, David R.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Annual Review of Public Health.Publisher: Annual Reviews, 2021Subject(s): Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University | ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES | CHILD DEVELOPMENT | DISCRIMINATION | HEALTH | INTERVENTION | RACISM | STRESS | INTERNATIONAL | UNITED STATESOnline resources: DOI:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-090419-101940 (Open access) | See related infographic (includes accessible text) In: Annual Review of Public Health, 2021, 42: 115-134Summary: Inequalities in health outcomes impose substantial human and economic costs on all societies—and the relation between early adversity and lifelong well-being presents a rich scientific framework for fresh thinking about health promotion and disease prevention broadly, augmented by a deeper focus on how racism influences disparities more specifically. This review begins with an overview of advances in the biology of adversity and resilience through an early childhood lens, followed by an overview of the unique effects of racism on health and a selective review of findings from related intervention research. This article presents a framework for addressing multiple dimensions of the public health challenge—including institutional/structural racism, cultural racism, and interpersonal discrimination—and concludes with the compelling need to protect the developing brain and other biological systems from the physiological disruptions of toxic stress that can undermine the building blocks of optimal health and development in the early childhood period. (Authors' abstract). Record #7104
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Annual Review of Public Health, 2021, 42: 115-134

Inequalities in health outcomes impose substantial human and economic costs on all societies—and the relation between early adversity and lifelong well-being presents a rich scientific framework for fresh thinking about health promotion and disease prevention broadly, augmented by a deeper focus on how racism influences disparities more specifically. This review begins with an overview of advances in the biology of adversity and resilience through an early childhood lens, followed by an overview of the unique effects of racism on health and a selective review of findings from related intervention research. This article presents a framework for addressing multiple dimensions of the public health challenge—including institutional/structural racism, cultural racism, and interpersonal discrimination—and concludes with the compelling need to protect the developing brain and other biological systems from the physiological disruptions of toxic stress that can undermine the building blocks of optimal health and development in the early childhood period. (Authors' abstract). Record #7104