The Promise of Racial Healing to Achieve Health Equity Through School-Based Prevention
In the wake of the American Public Health Association's formal declaration of racism as a public health crisis, there is an urgent need for more approaches to promoting the socioemotional well-being of K-12 Black, Indigenous, people of color (BIPOC) students, educators, and families.1 Cumulativ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of public health (1971) 2023-06, Vol.113 (S2), p.S119-S123 |
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description | In the wake of the American Public Health Association's formal declaration of racism as a public health crisis, there is an urgent need for more approaches to promoting the socioemotional well-being of K-12 Black, Indigenous, people of color (BIPOC) students, educators, and families.1 Cumulative exposures and reexposures to direct and indirect acts of racism can adversely affect emotion regulation and the ability to sustain meaningful relationships, disrupting socioemotional health and well-being.2 Race-based stress can lead to racial trauma, and merely perceived experiences of racial discrimination can produce such stress.2Household and community-level experiences of racial trauma have effects similar to those of other adverse childhood experiences,3,4 and calls to address racism within K-12 schools by interrupting and preventing the transmission of intergenerational cycles of trauma at the systemic, institutional, and individual levels are well placed.5,6 Such action will need to counteract the whitewashing of the public K-12 curriculum, evident through the censoring of antiracist books and the movement to ban the teaching of accurate US history about race, exacerbating generations of systemic disadvantage in BIPOC communities.7 |
doi_str_mv | 10.2105/AJPH.2023.307288 |
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and reexposures to direct and indirect acts of racism can adversely affect emotion regulation and the ability to sustain meaningful relationships, disrupting socioemotional health and well-being.2 Race-based stress can lead to racial trauma, and merely perceived experiences of racial discrimination can produce such stress.2Household and community-level experiences of racial trauma have effects similar to those of other adverse childhood experiences,3,4 and calls to address racism within K-12 schools by interrupting and preventing the transmission of intergenerational cycles of trauma at the systemic, institutional, and individual levels are well placed.5,6 Such action will need to counteract the whitewashing of the public K-12 curriculum, evident through the censoring of antiracist books and the movement to ban the teaching of accurate US history about race, exacerbating generations of systemic disadvantage in BIPOC communities.7</description><identifier>ISSN: 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Durriyyah</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Kim, Bo-Kyung Elizabeth</creatorcontrib><title>The Promise of Racial Healing to Achieve Health Equity Through School-Based Prevention</title><title>American journal of public health (1971)</title><addtitle>Am J Public Health</addtitle><description>In the wake of the American Public Health Association's formal declaration of racism as a public health crisis, there is an urgent need for more approaches to promoting the socioemotional well-being of K-12 Black, Indigenous, people of color (BIPOC) students, educators, and families.1 Cumulative exposures and reexposures to direct and indirect acts of racism can adversely affect emotion regulation and the ability to sustain meaningful relationships, disrupting socioemotional health and well-being.2 Race-based stress can lead to racial trauma, and merely perceived experiences of racial discrimination can produce such stress.2Household and community-level experiences of racial trauma have effects similar to those of other adverse childhood experiences,3,4 and calls to address racism within K-12 schools by interrupting and preventing the transmission of intergenerational cycles of trauma at the systemic, institutional, and individual levels are well placed.5,6 Such action will need to counteract the whitewashing of the public K-12 curriculum, evident through the censoring of antiracist books and the movement to ban the teaching of accurate US history about race, exacerbating generations of systemic disadvantage in BIPOC communities.7</description><subject>Academic achievement</subject><subject>Adolescent Health</subject><subject>Childhood</subject><subject>Childhood factors</subject><subject>Children</subject><subject>Cultural heritage</subject><subject>Diversity training</subject><subject>Emotional regulation</subject><subject>Emotions</subject><subject>Fairness</subject><subject>Health disparities</subject><subject>Health Equity</subject><subject>Health Services 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subjects | Academic achievement Adolescent Health Childhood Childhood factors Children Cultural heritage Diversity training Emotional regulation Emotions Fairness Health disparities Health Equity Health Services Accessibility Humans Indigenous peoples Mental health services Minority & ethnic groups Minority Children Opinions, Ideas, & Practice Prevention Public health Public schools Race Race/Ethnicity Racial discrimination Racial Groups Racism Restorative justice Schools School Health Social & emotional learning Social behavior Stress Students Systemic racism Teachers Teaching Trauma Well being White supremacy |
title | The Promise of Racial Healing to Achieve Health Equity Through School-Based Prevention |
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