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1 | AMENDMENT TO HOUSE RESOLUTION 647
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2 | AMENDMENT NO. ___. Amend House Resolution 647 by replacing | ||||||
3 | everything after the heading with the following: | ||||||
4 | "WHEREAS, Research over the last two decades in the | ||||||
5 | evolving fields of neuroscience, brain science,
molecular | ||||||
6 | biology, public health, genomics, and epigenetics reveals that | ||||||
7 | experiences in the first few
years of life build changes into | ||||||
8 | the biology of the human body, including the architecture of | ||||||
9 | the brain;
and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, Brain growth occurs rapidly in the first three | ||||||
11 | years of a child's life and accelerates over the
next ten | ||||||
12 | years, slowing during the early twenties; a child's brain and | ||||||
13 | body development can be impaired
by certain environmental | ||||||
14 | conditions, influencing the person's physical and mental | ||||||
15 | health and social
outcomes over their life span; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Adverse childhood experiences, or ACEs, are | ||||||
2 | traumatic experiences occurring during
childhood that have | ||||||
3 | been found to have a profound effect on a child's developing | ||||||
4 | brain structure and
body and may result in poor health during | ||||||
5 | the person's adulthood; ACEs can be physical, emotional, or
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6 | sexual abuse, neglect, household dysfunction, including | ||||||
7 | caregiver substance abuse, untreated mental
illness or | ||||||
8 | incarceration, domestic violence, or separation or divorce | ||||||
9 | involving household members; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, Experiencing ACEs as well as experiencing intense | ||||||
11 | and prolonged stress, like community
violence, without | ||||||
12 | positive influences or nurturing relationships during | ||||||
13 | childhood can become known as
toxic stress, which can further | ||||||
14 | affect a child's brain development and function and lead to | ||||||
15 | long-term cognitive
and health impairments; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, ACEs studies have also found a strong correlation | ||||||
17 | between the number of ACEs and a
person's risk for disease and | ||||||
18 | negative health behaviors, including suicide, depression, | ||||||
19 | cancer, stroke,
ischemic heart disease, diabetes, autoimmune | ||||||
20 | disease, smoking, substance abuse, interpersonal
violence, | ||||||
21 | obesity, unplanned pregnancies, lower educational achievement, | ||||||
22 | workplace absenteeism, and
lower wages; and | ||||||
23 | WHEREAS, Findings from the Illinois 2013 Behavioral Risk |
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1 | Factor Surveillance Survey (BRFSS) supported by the Illinois | ||||||
2 | ACEs
Response Collaborative found that almost 60% of | ||||||
3 | non-institutionalized adult Illinoisans reported having
at | ||||||
4 | least one ACE; this number equates to almost 5 million Illinois | ||||||
5 | residents; 14.2% of Illinois adults
reported four or more ACEs; | ||||||
6 | and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, BRFSS data also showed that approximately 20% of | ||||||
8 | African American and Hispanic adults in
Illinois reported four | ||||||
9 | or more ACEs, compared to 13% of non-Hispanic whites; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, The Illinois 2013 BRFSS also found that 43% of | ||||||
11 | women and 48% of men reported having one
to three ACEs; 15% of | ||||||
12 | women and 13% men reported experiencing four or more ACEs; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, BRFSS data showed that individuals with between 1 | ||||||
14 | and 3 ACEs reported their physical health
was not good 12% more | ||||||
15 | often and their mental health was not good 44% more often than | ||||||
16 | individuals
with no ACEs; individuals with more than 4 ACEs | ||||||
17 | reported their physical health was not good 65%
more often and | ||||||
18 | their mental health was not good 176% more often than | ||||||
19 | individuals with no ACEs; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Individuals with six or more ACEs were found, on | ||||||
21 | average, to live 20 years less than those
individuals with zero | ||||||
22 | ACEs; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Among those who misuse opioids, the individuals | ||||||
2 | most likely to experience problems with
addiction are those who | ||||||
3 | suffered ACEs; general population surveys have estimated that | ||||||
4 | 75% of
individuals with substance use disorders have | ||||||
5 | experienced trauma early in their lives; rates are even
higher | ||||||
6 | among populations seeking treatment for opioid addiction; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, ACEs appear to be a root cause of many of our most | ||||||
8 | challenging health and social problems
and, without adequate | ||||||
9 | family intervention and support, appear to be transmitted from | ||||||
10 | one generation
to the next, further exacerbating the poor | ||||||
11 | outcomes from ACEs and toxic stress; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, It is less disruptive to well-being, less costly, | ||||||
13 | and more effective to positively influence the
development of a | ||||||
14 | child's brain than to intervene and correct negative | ||||||
15 | experiences and outcomes later
in life; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, Trauma-informed care is an approach that can bring | ||||||
17 | greater understanding and more
effective ways to prevent, | ||||||
18 | identify, and support and serve children, adults, families, and | ||||||
19 | communities
affected by ACEs, trauma, adversity, and toxic | ||||||
20 | stress; and | ||||||
21 | WHEREAS, Trauma-informed care is not a therapy or an |
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1 | intervention; it is a principle-based, culture change
process | ||||||
2 | aimed at recognizing strengths and resiliency and helping | ||||||
3 | people who have
experienced trauma to overcome those issues in | ||||||
4 | order to achieve personal and economic well-being;
and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services | ||||||
6 | Administration and many other agencies
and organizations | ||||||
7 | provide substantial resources to better engage individuals, | ||||||
8 | community-based
organizations, and communities across the | ||||||
9 | United States in order to implement trauma-informed care;
and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, A trauma-informed Illinois enhances the ability | ||||||
11 | of children and adults to adapt, cope and
thrive despite | ||||||
12 | difficult experiences and supports the mental well-being of | ||||||
13 | everyone in our state; therefore,
be it | ||||||
14 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
15 | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL
ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
16 | we acknowledge that toxic stress
and adverse childhood | ||||||
17 | experiences can have significantly negative short-term, | ||||||
18 | long-term, and
generational impacts, and that early | ||||||
19 | interventions through trauma-informed care is the most | ||||||
20 | efficient
and cost effective way to combat these impacts; and | ||||||
21 | be it further | ||||||
22 | RESOLVED, That the Illinois General Assembly is urged to |
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1 | seek out opportunities to enhance legislation
through the | ||||||
2 | science of resiliency and a trauma informed lens and funding | ||||||
3 | around early intervention
services for children and families | ||||||
4 | that centers the principles of brain development, the intimate
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5 | connection between mental and physical health, and the concepts | ||||||
6 | of toxic stress and adverse childhood
experiences; and be it | ||||||
7 | further | ||||||
8 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
9 | delivered to the Governor, the House Speaker, the Senate
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10 | President, the House Majority Leader, the House Minority | ||||||
11 | Leader, the Senate Majority Leader, the Senate Minority
Leader, | ||||||
12 | and the Illinois Interagency Council on Early Intervention."
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