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The Ezra Klein Show

What Does Toxic Stress Do to Children?

The Ezra Klein Show

New York Times Opinion

Society & Culture, Government, News

4.6 • 11K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2021

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s pioneering work on how childhood trauma shapes adult outcomes led to her being named the first surgeon general of California. That was in 2019. And then, of course, the novel coronavirus hit. The job of California’s surgeon general in 2020 was not what it was in 2019. But in some ways, Burke Harris’s expertise was more necessary than ever. This conversation is about the growing evidence that difficult experiences we face as children reverberate in our lives decades later. It’s profound research that should reshape how we think about social insurance, public morality and criminal justice. But it’s also a conversation about what the coronavirus has done to children — whether this year will be a trauma that marks a generation, and remakes their lives. How has it changed socialization for toddlers — like my 2-year-old son? What has it meant for children who can’t go to school, who watched their parents lose work or who had family members die alone in a hospital? How do we help them? How do we even understand what they’ve gone through, particularly when they can’t tell us? We also discuss the lessons California learned from the early difficulties in its vaccine rollout (“simplicity saves lives,” Burke Harris says), why we need to be investing a lot more in mental health therapeutics, the debate over universal child allowances, how to address racial and income disparities in vaccine distribution, the drivers of vaccine hesitancy in Black and brown communities, what a safe path to post-pandemic reopening would look like, why Covid-19 cases have been declining across the country, and much more. This is one of those conversations that will leave you looking at vast swaths of public policy differently. Don’t miss it. Mentioned in this episode: The Deepest Well: Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Adversity by Nadine Burke Harris “Roadmap for Resilience: The California Surgeon General’s Report on Adverse Childhood Experiences, Toxic Stress, and Health” “Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study” “The prevalence of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) in the lives of juvenile offenders” “Adverse childhood experiences and the risk of premature mortality” Recommendations: "Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers" by Robert Sapolsky "The Emotional Life of the Toddler" by Alicia Lieberman "The Woman Behind the New Deal" by Kirstin Downey "The Runaway Bunny" by Margaret Wise Brown You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of "The Ezra Klein Show" at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at [email protected]. “The Ezra Klein Show” is produced by RogĂ© Karma and Jeff Geld; fact-checking by Michelle Harris; original music by Isaac Jones; mixing by Jeff Geld.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm Mr. Klein and this is the Ezra Klein Show.

0:17.6

Sometimes you know you want to talk about a topic but you don't know if the conversation

0:23.9

is going to end up worthy to the topic.

0:26.4

This one delivers Dr. Nadine Bercaris is the first surgeon general of California.

0:33.9

She's known for doing pioneering work in the way adverse childhood experiences, what many

0:38.3

of us would think of as childhood trauma, end up shaping the rest of our lives, the way

0:43.5

they compound between changing our neurochemistry, changing even our biology, which genes express,

0:48.9

and changing our mental functioning, changing our social conditions in this endless ping pong

0:54.0

of compounding physical and social and behavioral impact that really ends up defining a lot

1:01.1

about what happens later.

1:02.1

And by the way, calls really profound things like to what degree are we responsible for our

1:06.1

own lives, for our own choices, for what we do when presented with a situation into

1:11.1

question.

1:12.1

This is really profound stuff.

1:13.6

It turns out to affect what happens when we are children.

1:17.0

It turns out to affect.

1:18.0

I mean, obviously our incomes when we get older, but whether or not we go to jail, our

1:21.6

risk of mental health issues, our risk of addiction, our life expectancy profoundly

1:26.4

it shapes our life expectancy.

1:28.4

And it is so predictable, right?

1:30.3

The more of these you have, the worse you end up doing, on average, on a bunch of these

1:34.5

different measures.

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