Resilience After Trauma: The Emerging Science of Dose
Venue
50 George SquareUniversity of Edinburgh
Room G.06
Edinburgh
EH8 9JU
Description
Scientists now recognize that the impact of trauma is best thought of in terms of dosage, with each subsequent trauma exposure adding to the harm, in part because of the biological impacts of exposure to chronic stress. Almost everyone is exposed to traumatic events (the pandemic has made this truer than ever), but this sad reality also means that resilience is far more common than we used to believe. There is extensive untapped wisdom about resilience, a concept that is frequently misunderstood, even in the scientific literature. The concept of dosage can transform our ideas about strengths and what we need to overcome trauma, just as it has revolutionized insights into the true burden of trauma too. Resilience refers to all the things we do—and all the resources we get from others—that help us overcome trauma. These individual, family, and community strengths can also be thought of in terms of dosage, countering dosages of trauma and ameliorating harm. There is a growing evidence base showing that building your resilience portfolio (across meaning making, regulatory, and interpersonal domains) can help people counter even large trauma dosages. Easily accessible tools, such as mindfulness, exercise, volunteering, committing to a cause, “forest bathing” (spending time in natural environments), yoga, expressing gratitude, build our resilience portfolios and minimize the aftereffects of trauma. Psychologists used to treat resilient people like unicorns—remarkable and rare. Now we know they are more like squirrels—they are everywhere!
Please note that this talk will be recorded and will be made available to view after the event. To receive details of this please email claire.buchan[at]ed.ac.uk to request to join our seminar mailing list.
Key speakers
- Distinguished Research Professor, Sherry Hamby