Stating that childhood abuse and trauma last forever is not an overstatement. Childhood trauma and abuse leave epigenetic “scars”—chemical marks on DNA and chromatin that can durably change how stress and emotion‑related genes are expressed without altering the genetic code itself. Like quantum mechanics, generational child abuse is also rarely understood by most people, including policy makers, even though the quantum mechanics of childhood abuse and trauma play out every day in children’s bodies and brains.
Also, childhood trauma and abuse resemble quantum phenomena: at the moment of exposure, the child’s developing brain and body exist in a cloud of possibilities, but repeated toxic stress “collapses the wave” toward certain patterns—hyper‑vigilant stress systems, altered fear and memory circuits, and heightened risk for depression, suicide, addiction, and chronic disease decades later. Epigenetic studies show that these trauma‑linked changes can be remarkably stable and, in some cases, detectable across generations, yet they are not truly permanent laws of nature: with safe relationships, effective treatment, and nurturing environments, some of these biological imprints can be softened or partially rewritten, reminding us that even when trauma has shaped the probabilities, it does not have to fix a child’s future in stone.
7.8 million children are reported to Child Protective Services annually in America, and at least that many more suffer abuse and trauma without ever being reported because child abuse is invisible. Our schools, courts, jails, and prisons are filled with traumatized children and youth who need help finding safety, healing, and skill‑building to lead productive lives. The cost of ignoring or underserving these children is incredibly high for them, for their families, and for the nation’s health, economy, and public safety.
Until we view child abuse and trauma as an American epidemic and public health and safety crisis our institutions and communities will continue to lead the world in the wrong things:
Health and mortality
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Life expectancy
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U.S. life expectancy is about 77 years, roughly 3 years below the OECD average, despite far higher health spending.
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Infant and child mortality
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The U.S. has one of the highest infant mortality rates among rich nations: around 5.4–5.6 deaths per 1,000 live births, more than three times rates in countries like Norway, Sweden, and Japan (≈1.7).
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Maternal mortality
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U.S. maternal mortality is among the worst in the OECD: about 3 times the OECD average (≈33 deaths per 100,000 vs. 11).
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Preventable and avoidable deaths
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The U.S. has the highest rate of avoidable/preventable deaths among peer nations—roughly 350 per 100,000, compared with an OECD average of about 225.
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In a Commonwealth Fund comparison, preventable mortality in the U.S. (177 per 100,000) was more than double the best‑performing country, Switzerland (83).
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Cost vs. results
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The U.S. spends about 17–18% of GDP on health care, roughly 2× the OECD average, yet ranks at or near the bottom on many outcome measures.
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Violence and gun deaths
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Firearm mortality
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U.S. firearm death rate is about 10.4 per 100,000, roughly five times higher than France and Switzerland (≈2.1–2.2) and far above other wealthy countries.
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Assault‑related deaths overall are around 7.4 per 100,000, more than five times the rate of the next‑closest high‑income country and well above the OECD average.
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Economic cost of gun violence
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Gun violence is estimated to cost the U.S. roughly $557 billion per year, or about $1,700 per taxpayer, when medical costs, lost income, and quality‑of‑life impacts are included.
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Inequality, poverty, and social outcomes
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Income and wealth inequality
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Among peer nations, the U.S. has one of the highest levels of income inequality and the highest rate of relative poverty, with especially wide gaps between top and bottom.
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Child and relative poverty
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Oxfam notes that among 10 peer countries, the U.S. has the highest rate of relative poverty and the second‑highest rates of child poverty and infant mortality.
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Life outcomes in unequal societies
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More unequal countries tend to have shorter lives, worse educational outcomes, more mental illness, more imprisonment, and higher infant mortality; on many of these measures, the U.S. performs worse than most of its OECD peers.
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Perceived stagnation for the next generation
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Global surveys find Americans are among those most likely to believe children will be worse off financially than their parents, reflecting anxiety about mobility and inequality.
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Incarceration and justice
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Incarceration rate
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For decades, the U.S. has maintained the highest incarceration rate in the world, far above other advanced democracies, with especially high imprisonment among young men with low education, particularly Black men.
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This produces a large “outcast” group whose prison history reinforces poverty, racial inequality, and limited social mobility.
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Summary: where the U.S. is failing compared to other advanced nations
Putting this together, America stands out negatively in:
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Basic health outcomes – lower life expectancy, and far higher infant, child, and maternal mortality than peer nations.
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Preventable deaths and safety – top‑tier rates of avoidable mortality and by far the highest levels of firearm and assault deaths among rich countries.
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Economic inequality and poverty – extreme income/wealth gaps, high relative and child poverty, and associated educational and health penalties.
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Mass incarceration – world‑leading imprisonment rates, especially for marginalized communities, which deepen inequality across generations.
KIDS AT RISK ACTION / KARA / INVISIBLE CHILDREN
- #ChildhoodTrauma
- #ACEs
- #Epigenetics
- #QuantumMechanics
- #ChildAbuseAwareness
- #PublicHealth
- #KidsAtRiskAction
- #InvisibleChildren







