| Literature DB >> 30018217 |
Ann S Masten1, Andrew J Barnes2.
Abstract
Advances in developmental resilience science are highlighted with commentary on implications for pediatric systems that aspire to promote healthy development over the life course. Resilience science is surging along with growing concerns about the consequences of adverse childhood experiences on lifelong development. Resilience is defined as the capacity of a system to adapt successfully to challenges that threaten the function, survival, or future development of the system. This definition is scalable across system levels and across disciplines, applicable to resilience in a person, a family, a health care system, a community, an economy, or other systems. Robust findings on resilience in childhood underscore the importance of exposure dose; fundamental adaptive systems embedded in the lives of individuals and their interactions with other systems; developmental timing; and the crucial role of healthcare practitioners and educators as well as family caregivers in nurturing resilience on the "front lines" of lived childhood experience. Resilience science suggests that human resilience is common, dynamic, generated through myriad interactions of multiple systems from the biological to the sociocultural, and mutable given strategic targeting and timing. Implications for pediatric practice and training are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cascade; pathways; protective factor; resilience; risk; stress; system; vulnerability
Year: 2018 PMID: 30018217 PMCID: PMC6069421 DOI: 10.3390/children5070098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Core questions in resilience studies of individuals and examples of constructs measured.
| What are the Challenges? | How Is the Person Doing? | What Processes Support Success? |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| Trauma | Developmental tasks | Neurobiological |
| Neglect | Mental health | Behavioral |
| ACEs 1 | Physical health | Familial and relational |
| Poverty | Happiness | Community |
| Natural disaster | Work achievement | Cultural |
| War | Caregiving | Societal |
1 Adverse childhood experiences.
Shortlist of common resilience factors for child development.
| Caring family, sensitive caregiving (nurturing family members) |
| Close relationships, emotional security, belonging (family cohesion, belonging) |
| Skilled parenting (skilled family management) |
| Agency, motivation to adapt (active coping, mastery) |
| Problem-solving skills, planning, executive function skills (collaborative problem-solving, family flexibility) |
| Self-regulation skills, emotion regulation (co-regulation, balancing family needs) |
| Self-efficacy, positive view of the self or identity (positive views of family and family identity) |
| Hope, faith, optimism (hope, faith, optimism, positive family outlook) |
| Meaning-making, belief life has meaning (coherence, family purpose, collective meaning-making) |
| Routines and rituals (family routines and rituals, family role organization) |
| Engagement in a well-functioning school |
| Connections with well-functioning communities |
Note: Promotive/protective factors from the child literature are listed with corresponding family factors in parentheses.