Trauma is a universal experience, and our approach as health care providers to trauma should be universal as well. That’s my main take-home point after learning from our three guests today when talking about trauma-informed care, an approach that highlights key principles including safety, trustworthiness, peer support, collaboration, empowerment, and cultural sensitivity.
With that said, there is so much more that I learned from our guests for this trauma-informed care podcast. Our guests include Mariah Robertson, Kate Duchowny, and Ashwin Kotwal. Mariah discussed her JAGS paper on applying a trauma-informed approach to home visits. Kate and Ashwin talked about their research on the prevalence of lifetime trauma and its association with physical and psychosocial health among adults at the end of life. We also explored several questions with them, including how to define trauma, its prevalence in older adults, the impact of past traumatic experiences, the potential triggers of trauma screening, and the application of trauma-informed principles in clinical practice.
If you want a deeper dive, check out the following resources:
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Our “Nature of Suffering” podcast with BJ Miller and Naomi Saks
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Dani Chammas’ Annals paper on countertransference and why we shouldn’t say “that the patient was difficult rather than that I felt frustrated.”
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A great Curbsiders podcast episode on Trauma-informed care with Megan Gerber
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CAPC’s Trauma-informed care toolkit
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Mariah’s article on Home-Based Care for LGBTQ or another diverse gender identity Older Adults