michelle bosquet enlow, the neurobiology of trauma: ripple effects through individuals, generations,...

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The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society Michelle Bosquet Enlow, PhD Assistant in Psychology, Department of Psychiatry Boston Children’s Hospital Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School

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Page 1: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals,

Generations, and Society Michelle Bosquet Enlow, PhD

Assistant in Psychology, Department of Psychiatry Boston Children’s Hospital

Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School

Page 2: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Terminology • Stress • Trauma

Exposure to actual or threatened (a) death, (b) serious injury or (c) sexual violation

Direct exposure

Witness event in person Learn event occurred to close family/friend Experience repeated or extreme exposure to aversive details of event

*Center on the Developing Child, Harvard University *DSM-5

Page 3: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Caveats! • Correlation ≠ Destiny • Resilience

– Individual, environmental – Positive growth – Inform interventions

• Focus on mothers – Fathers are also extremely

important!

Page 4: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Rates • By adulthood, 90% ≥ 1 trauma

• rates birth to 5 years

• Exposures “correlate” • Low-income, ethnic/racial

minority Severe Multiple Chronic Buffers

Page 5: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Effects Type x Timing Pre-exposure functioning Buffers Environmental response

Page 6: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Effects Stress Reactivity

Autonomic Nervous System

Hypothalamic -Pituitary-Adrenal Axis

Multiple Brain Regions (PFC, Amygdala)

Page 7: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Effects Cognitive Functioning

IQ Executive

Functioning

Academic Achievement

Job Options Socioeconomic Status

Page 8: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Effects Internal Representations

Trauma

Page 9: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Exposure Effects Mental and Physical Health • Leading cause of psychiatric illness

– PTSD, depression, anxiety, ADHD, substance abuse, disruptive behavior disorders, personality disorders

MISDIAGNOSIS! • Physical health

– Immune functioning – Lifetime disease risk

Page 10: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Race/Ethnicity & Exposure Effects Differential Effects of Exposure • Hypotheses

– Increased exposure to adversity – Ongoing discrimination stress – Reduced access to buffering resources – Different cultural style for coping – Differences in underlying physiology

• Mechanisms?

• More research needed!

Page 11: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Intergenerational Effects

Page 12: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Intergenerational Effects: Pregnancy • Vulnerability period

– heightened exposure – PTSD, depression, anxiety

• Lifetime cumulative effects • “Prenatal programming”

Page 13: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Intergenerational Effects: Pregnancy

Maternal History

ANS HPAA

Epigenetics

Immune Endocrine

Perinatal Complications

Page 14: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Intergenerational Effects: Developmental Context

Economic Environment

Neighborhood Schools

Stress Exposures

Nutrition/ Toxins

Compensatory Buffers

Social Support

Partners (Stability,

DV)

Child Friends

Community Connections

Caregiving

Attachment Relationship Maltreatment

Page 15: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Intergenerational Effects: Developmental Context

Maternal History

Child Prenatal Environment

Childhood Environment

Temperament Stress Reactivity

Cognition Physical Health Mental Health

Page 16: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society
Page 17: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Implications for Intervention

• Ongoing Research

– Methods for identifying at-risk

– Mechanisms Interventions

• Existing Research – Possible many points in system

Page 18: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Implications for Intervention

• Individual Level – Stress reduction – Improve mental health – Promote positive caregiving

• Support Systems – Schools – Social support – Religious/cultural institutions

Page 19: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Implications for Intervention

• Societal/Public Policy Level – Address barriers to treatment

• Insurance • Sufficient mental health, social support

resources • Logistics • Misdiagnosis

– Wrong treatment – “Bad” kid – Criminal justice system

Page 20: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Implications for Intervention

• Societal/Public Policy Level – Recognition

• Trauma has broad effects • Trauma contribution to “individual problems”

– Academic achievement, low SES, child maltreatment, DV, addiction, violent behavior

• Trauma as public health problem – Reduction

• Urgent need to reduce trauma exposures

Page 21: Michelle Bosquet Enlow, The Neurobiology of Trauma: Ripple Effects through Individuals, Generations, and Society

Thank you