Article 2MR09 How childhood stress can knock 20 years off your life

How childhood stress can knock 20 years off your life

by
Paula Cocozza
from on (#2MR09)

Heart disease, depression, life expectancy. New research claims that stress exerts a far heavier physical toll than previously understood. The film-maker James Redford talks about how toxic stress can be a killer

There is a scene in James Redford's new film, Resilience, in which a paediatrician cites a parental misdeed so outmoded as to seem bizarre. "Parents used to smoke in the car with kids in the back and the windows rolled up," she says, incredulous. How long ago those days now seem; how wise today's parents are to the dangers of those toxins. Yet every week in her clinic in the Bayview-Hunters Point area of San Francisco, children present with symptoms of a new pollutant - one that is just as damaging. But unlike the smoke-filled car, this new pollutant is invisible, curling undetected around children's lives and causing lasting damage to their lungs, their hearts, their immune systems.

"Stress," Redford says. "It is a neurotoxin like lead or mercury poisoning." He mentions the city of Flint in Michigan, where residents were exposed to lead in drinking water. "And that's literally what's going on" with children who are "coming from really stressful environments. We know what environmental toxins are. Well, this is an environmental toxin." The proliferation of so-called "toxic stress" among children, Redford says, "is a public health crisis".

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