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LEADER 00000ngm a22004451i 4500 
003    CaSfKAN 
005    20140818124419.0 
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008    140908p20142005cau090        o   vleng d 
028 52 1120795|bKanopy 
035    (OCoLC)897774267 
040    UtOrBLW|beng|erda|cUtOrBLW 
099    Streaming Video Kanopy 
245 04 The ACE study.|h[Kanopy electronic resource] 
264  1 [San Francisco, California, USA] :|bKanopy Streaming,
       |c2014. 
300    1 online resource (1 video file, approximately 90 min.) :
       |bdigital, .flv file, sound 
336    two-dimensional moving image|btdi|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
344    digital 
347    video file|bMPEG-4|bFlash 
500    Title from title frames. 
518    Originally produced by Cavalcade Productions in 2005. 
520    "We saw that things like intractable smoking, things like 
       promiscuity, use of street drugs, heavy alcohol 
       consumption, etc. , these were fairly common in the 
       backgrounds of many of the patients. . . These were merely
       techniques they were using, these were merely coping 
       mechanisms that had gone into place." Vincent Felitti, MD.
       When Dr. Vincent Felitti, head of the Department of 
       Preventive Medicine at Kaiser Permanente in San Diego, 
       began to delve into the reasons for the high dropout rate 
       of patients who'd been successfully losing weight in 
       Kaiser's obesity program, he found to his surprise that a 
       high proportion of those dropping out had histories of 
       childhood abuse or neglect. Dr. Robert Anda, who had been 
       doing research with the Centers for Disease Control and 
       Prevention on the psychosocial origins of health-risk 
       behaviors in patients at VA hospitals, heard Felitti speak
       about his findings, and in 1992 the two began to 
       collaborate on the largest-scale study to date of the 
       incidence and effects of childhood trauma, known as the 
       Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study. According to 
       data collected from the over 17,000 Kaiser patients in 
       this ongoing retrospective and prospective study, adverse 
       childhood experiences, though well concealed, are 
       unexpectedly common, have a profound negative effect on 
       adult health and well-being a half century later, and are 
       a prime determinant of adult health status in the United 
       States. The ACE Study has major implications for the 
       healthcare professions: that all patients should be 
       routinely screened for adverse childhood experiences; that
       a childhood trauma history may be very relevant to both 
       serious illness and vague somatic complaints; and that 
       appropriate approaches to treatment must include dealing 
       with childhood trauma. Additional data suggest that 
       evaluating patients for ACEs is also cost-effective. In 
       this two-video series, Drs. Felitti and Anda, co-
       investigators of the ACE Study, describe the study and its
       ramifications. Psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk, 
       psychotherapist Mary Tendall, and eight adult survivors of
       childhood trauma add their perspectives. 
538    Mode of access: World Wide Web. 
650  0 Psychic trauma in children. 
650  0 Stress (Psychology) 
650  0 Child abuse. 
650  0 Post-traumatic stress disorder. 
655  7 Feature films.|2lcgft 
700 1  Anda, Robert F.,|eco-investigator. 
700 1  Felitti, Vincent J.,|eco-investigator. 
700 1  Tendall, Mary,|eonscreen presenter. 
700 1  Van der Kolk, Bessel A.,|d1943-|eonscreen presenter. 
700 1  Redding, Carol A.,|eonscreen presentor. 
710 2  Kanopy (Firm) 
856 40 |uhttps://naperville.kanopy.com/node/120796|zAvailable on 
       Kanopy 
856 42 |zCover Image|uhttps://www.kanopy.com/node/120796/external
       -image