By The National Child Traumatic Stress Network

Data from the most recent National Survey of Adolescents and other studies indicate
that one in four children and adolescents in the United States experiences at least one
potentially traumatic event before the age of 162, and more than 13% of 17-year-olds—one
in eight—have experienced posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) at some point in their
lives.

Most, if not all, of these young people also have access to a wide range of psychoactive
substances that can both dull the effects of stress and place teens at increased risk
of experiencing trauma. It is estimated that 29% of adolescents–nearly one in three–have
experimented with illegal drugs by the time they complete 8th grade, and 41% have
consumed alcohol.4 For many adolescents, such early experimentation eventually progresses
to abuse of—or dependence on—illicit drugs or alcohol. Every year, approximately one in five
American adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 engages in abusive/dependent or
problematic use of illicit drugs or alcohol.

Share This Post!

Post-Traumatic Childhood

By Bessel A. van der Kolk Brookline, Mass. - As a young psychiatrist, I worked with Vietnam War combat veterans and confronted the astonishing lack of resources to help these men and women [...]

About the CDC-Kaiser ACE Study

By the Center for Disease Control The CDC-Kaiser Permanente Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study is one of the largest investigations of childhood abuse and neglect and later-life health and well-being. The original ACE [...]

How Childhood Abuse Changes the Brain

By Leonard Holmes Studies have demonstrated over and over that childhood abuse and neglect results in permanent changes to the developing human brain. These changes in brain structure appear to be significant [...]

Change A Child’s Life

Please join us today and shine a light on the invisible wounds of childhood trauma so that abused children receive the treatment they deserve.