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Creating Trauma Informed Systems of Care for Human Service Settings

Learn how to address trauma in human service settings with this comprehensive guide. Understand the impact of trauma and implement trauma-informed care practices.

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Creating Trauma Informed Systems of Care for Human Service Settings

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  1. Creating Trauma Informed Systems of Care for Human Service Settings Robert W. Glover, Ph.D. Executive Director Brian Sims, M.D. NASMHPD Consultant National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors

  2. Represents the $36.7 Billion Public Mental Health System serving 6.4 million people annually in all 50 states, 4 territories, and the District of Columbia. An affiliation with the approximately 220 State Psychiatric Hospitals: Serve 200,000 people per year and 50,000 people served at any point in time.

  3. Vision: Mental health is universally perceived as essential to overall health and well-being with services that are available, accessible, and of high quality. Mission: NASMHPD serves as the national representative and advocate for state mental health agencies and their directors and supports effective stewardship of state mental health systems. NASMHPD informs its members on current and emerging public policy issues, educates on research findings and best practices, provides consultation and technical assistance, collaborates with key stakeholders, and facilitates state to state sharing. Priorities for NASMHPD Transforming Mental Health

  4. Introduction • Some of the Presentation Content May Describe Traumatic Experiences • Please Take Care of Yourself • Word Choice Translation • Examples: “Consumer” versus “User”; “Provider” versus “Caregiver” • Consumer Voice – “In Their Own Words”

  5. Content Introduction I. What is Trauma and Why Must We Address It? (Bob Glover) II. Understanding the Bio-Psychosocial Impact of Trauma (Brian Sims) III. Trauma Sensitive Tools (Bob Glover and Brian Sims) IV. DVD – “Healing Neen” (Bob Glover – Introduction) V. Peer Panel and Next Steps

  6. Creating Trauma Informed Systems of Care for Human Service Settings I. What is Trauma and Why Must We Address It?

  7. Seclusion and Restraint - “In Their Own Words”

  8. What is Trauma? • Definition (NASMHPD, 2006) • The experience of violence and victimization including sexual abuse, physical abuse, severe neglect, loss, domestic violence and/or the witnessing of violence, terrorism or disasters • DSM IV-TR (APA, 2000) • Person’s response involves intense fear, horror and helplessness • Extreme stress that overwhelms the person’s capacity to cope

  9. Types of trauma resulting in serious and persistent mental health problems: • Are usually not a “single blow” event e.g. rape, natural disaster • Are interpersonal in nature: intentional, prolonged, repeated, severe • Occur in childhood and adolescence and may extend over an individual’s life span (Terr, 1991; Giller, 1999)

  10. Definition of TraumaInformed Care • Mental Health Treatment that incorporates: • An appreciation for the high prevalence of traumatic experiences in persons who receive mental health services • A thorough understanding of the profound neurological, biological, psychological and social effects of trauma and violence on the individual (Jennings, 2004)

  11. Prevalence of TraumaMental Health Population – United States • 90% of public mental health clients have been exposed to trauma (Mueser et al., 2004, Mueser et al., 1998) • Most have multiple experiences of trauma (Mueser et al., 2004, Mueser et al., 1998) • 97% of homeless women with SMI have experienced severe physical & sexual abuse – 87% experience this abuse both in childhood and adulthood (Goodman et al., 1997) Anna Jennings

  12. Prevalence of TraumaChild Mental Health/Youth Detention Population - U.S. • American study of 100 adolescent inpatients; 93% had trauma histories and 32% had PTSD • 70-90% incarcerated girls – sexual, physical, emotional abuse (DOC, 1998, Chesney & Sheldon, 1991) • Canadian study of 187 adolescents reported 42% had PTSD

  13. Prevalence of TraumaSubstance Abuse Population – U.S. • Up to two-thirds of men and women in SA treatment report childhood abuse & neglect (SAMSHA CSAT, 2000) • Study of male veterans in SA inpatient unit • 77% exposed to severe childhood trauma • 58% history of lifetime PTSD(Trifflemanet al., 1995) • 50% of women in SA treatment have history of rape or incest (Governor's Commission on Sexual and Domestic Violence, Commonwealth of MA,2006)

  14. Seclusion and Restraint: The Disgraceful Reality

  15. Other Critical Trauma Correlates: The Relationship of Childhood Trauma to Adult Health • Adverse Childhood Events (ACEs) have serious health consequences • Adoption of health risk behaviors as coping mechanisms • eating disorders, smoking, substance abuse, self harm, sexual promiscuity • Severe medical conditions: heart disease, pulmonary disease, liver disease, STDs, GYN cancer • Early Death (Felittiet al., 1998)

  16. Adverse Childhood Experiences • Recurrent and severe physical abuse • Recurrent and severe emotional abuse • Sexual abuse • Growing up in household with: • Alcohol or drug user • Member being imprisoned • Mentally ill, chronically depressed, or institutionalized member • Mother being treated violently • Both biological parents absent • Emotional or physical abuse (Fellittiet al, 1998)

  17. ACE Study • “Male child with an ACE score of 6 has a 4600% increase in likelihood of later becoming an IV drug user when compared to a male child with an ACE score of 0. Might heroin be used for the relief of profound anguish dating back to childhood experiences? Might it be the best coping device that an individual can find?”(Felitti et al, 1998)

  18. ACE Study • Is drug abuse self-destructive or is it a desperate attempt at self-healing, albeit while accepting a significant future risk?”(Felitti, et al, 1998)

  19. ACE Study • “Addiction is best viewed as an understandable, unconscious, compulsive use of psychoactive materials in response to abnormal, prior life experiences, most of which are concealed by shame, secrecy, and social taboo.”(Felitti et al, 1998)

  20. Sexual Trauma and Addiction • 208 African-American Women with histories of crack cocaine use • Of those Women, those with history of sexual trauma (n=134) reported being addicted to more substances than those who had not been sexually traumatized (n=74) • The Women with trauma histories reported more prior treatment failures than those without. (Young & Boyd, 2000)

  21. What does the prevalence data tell us? • The majority of adults and children in psychiatric treatment settings have trauma histories • A sizable percentage of people with substance use disorders have traumatic stress symptoms that interfere with achieving or maintaining sobriety • A sizable percentage of adults and children in the prison or juvenile justice system have trauma histories (Hodas, 2004, Cusack et al., Mueser et al., 1998, Lipschitz et al., 1999, NASMHPD, 1998)

  22. Prevalence of Trauma “Many providers may assume that abuse experiences are additional problems for the person, rather than the central problem…” (Hodas, 2004)

  23. What does the prevalence data tell us? • Growing body of research on the relationship between victimization and later offending • Many people with trauma histories have overlapping problems with mental health, addictions, physical health, and are victims or perpetrators of crime • Victims of trauma are found across all systems of care (Hodas, 2004, Cusack et al., Muesar et al., 1998, Lipschitz et al., 1999, NASMHPD, 1998)

  24. Therefore…… We need to presume the clients we serve have a history of traumatic stress and exercise “universal precautions” by creating systems of care that are trauma-informed (Hodas, 2005)

  25. Trauma Informed Care Systems

  26. Trauma Informed Care SystemsKey Principles • Integrate philosophies of care that guide all clinical interventions • Are based on current literature • Are inclusive of the survivor's perspective • Are informed by research and evidence of effective practice • Recognize that coercive interventions cause traumatization and re-traumatization and are to be avoided (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Ford, 2003; Najavits, 2003)

  27. Trauma Informed Care SystemsKey Features • Valuing the individual in all aspects of care • Neutral, objective and supportive language • Individually flexible plans and approaches • Avoid shaming or humiliation at all times (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Cook et al., 2002; Ford, 2003; Cusack et al. 2003; Jennings, 1998; Prescott, 2000)

  28. Trauma Informed Care SystemsKey Features • Focusing on what happened to you in place of what is wrong with you(Bloom, 2002) • Asking questions about current abuse • Addressing the current risk and developing a safety plan for discharge • One person sensitively asking the questions • Noting that people who are psychotic and delusional can respond reliably to trauma assessments if questions are asked appropriately (Rosenburg, 2001)

  29. Trauma InformedNon Trauma Informed • Recognition of high prevalence of trauma • Recognition of primary and co-occurring trauma diagnoses • Assess for traumatic histories & symptoms • Recognition of culture and practices that are re-traumatizing • Lack of education on trauma prevalence & “universal” precautions • Over-diagnosis of Schizophrenia & Bipolar D., Conduct D. & singular addictions • Cursory or no trauma assessment • “Tradition of Toughness” valued as best care approach

  30. Trauma InformedNon Trauma Informed • Power/control minimized - constant attention to culture • Caregivers/supporters – collaboration • Address training needs of staff to improve knowledge & sensitivity • Keys, security uniforms, staff demeanor, tone of voice • Rule enforcers – compliance • “Patient-blaming” as fallback position without training

  31. Trauma InformedNon Trauma Informed • Staff understand function of behavior (rage, repetition-compulsion, self-injury) • Objective, neutral language • Transparent systems open to outside parties • Behavior seen as intentionally provocative • Labeling language: manipulative, needy, “attention-seeking” • Closed system – advocates discouraged (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Cook et al., 2002, Ford, 2003, Cusack et al., Jennings, 1998, Prescott, 2000)

  32. Organizational Commitment to Trauma Informed Care

  33. Organizational Commitment to Trauma Informed Care • Adoption of a trauma informed policy to include: • commitment to appropriately assess trauma • avoidance of re-traumatizing practices • Key administrators get on board • Resources available for system modifications and performance improvement processes • Education of staff is prioritized (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Cook et al., 2002)

  34. Organizational Commitment to Trauma Informed Care • Unit staff can access expert trauma consultation • Unit staff can access trauma-specific treatment if indicated (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Cook et al., 2002)

  35. Organizational Commitment to Trauma Informed Care • Assessment data informs treatment planning in daily clinical work • Advance directives, safety plans and de-escalation preferences are communicated and used • Power & Control are minimized by attending constantly to unit culture (Fallot & Harris, 2002; Cook et al., 2002)

  36. Summary / Take Home • Train/Supervise Staff in Prevalence, Impact, Treatment Philosophy, and Interventions • Thorough and Sensitive Trauma Assessments • Organizational Culture: Physical, Treatment & Support Environments Infused with Recovery Focus (e.g., Respect/Kindness/Collaboration & Empowerment/Hope)

  37. New Zealand and Trauma Informed Care • Best Practice in the Reduction and Elimination of Seclusion and Restraint Seclusion: Time for Change O’HaganM, Divis M, Long J. (2008) • Action Plan developing alternatives to the use of seclusion and restraint in new zealand mental health inpatient settings seclusion: time for change (December 2008) • The Journey Forward Discussion Paper: Trauma and Service Response to Trauma (Dr. Emily Street, Consultant Clinical Psychologist -December 2007)

  38. Joan Gillece, Ph.D. NASMHPD Project Manager National Center for Trauma Informed Care (NCTIC) Joan.gillece@nasmhpd.org 703-739-9333 SAMHSA Funded

  39. “I have learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” -Maya Angelou Novelist, Poet

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