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I introduced facts on the personal section, I used the New York Times as a sources, a user removed it. I think the information about the minister and the type of wedding that it was is relevant. I have reverted the comments about the wedding. Please discuss here in this talk page Trade2tradewell (talk) 17:25, 19 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Bruce S. McEwen, Rockefeller University. "How Adversity and Trauma Affect the Brain and Get Under the Skin"(PDF). CUNY. p. 33. ...but what about those children who do suffer adverse early-life experiences? For that, ... [mentions 2011 New Yorker article]... focuses on Nadine Burke, a Harvard-trained, inner-city pediatrician, working in the San Francisco Bay Area. And, just to summarize these excerpts, Burke believes that regarding childhood trauma as a medical issue helps her to treat the symptoms of abused children more effectively. Moreover, she believes this approach, when applied to a large population, might help alleviate the broader dysfunction that plagues poor neighborhoods, going beyond the physical health symptoms that she encounters. In the views of Burke and the researchers she has been following, many of the health problems that we can think of are social issues — and therefore the province of economists and sociologists — and might better be addressed medically on the molecular level, among neurons and cytokines and interleukins. ...because the adult brain is plastic and adaptable, we are only beginning to recognize the full potential of interventions, like those done by Nadine Burke, which may help those children who have been abused actually establish a path where they can lead a normal and productive life. ...