| Literature DB >> 30912031 |
Simran Chaudhri1,2, Kimberly Caramanica Zweig3,4, Preetha Hebbar3,4, Sonia Angell4,5, Ashwin Vasan3,4,5,6.
Abstract
Trauma is pervasive in the USA, but disproportionately present in individuals and communities burdened by poverty, violence, and exposure to the criminal justice system. Engagement in clinical care, especially community-based primary care, is particularly important in the immediate period following community reentry from incarceration, where opportunities to engage clients in services are essential for improved health and reduced recidivism. Trauma-informed care offers an important and innovative opportunity for healthcare systems and primary care providers to improve quality of care and the patient experience, thereby increasing longitudinal engagement of marginalized and hard-to-reach patient populations like persons with criminal justice system exposure. Trauma-informed care implementation includes educating providers and transforming practices to incorporate safety, trust, peer support, collaboration, empowerment, and cultural perspectives into everyday operations and care delivery. While comprehensive trauma-informed care involves transformation on a system level, trauma-informed approaches can also be adopted by the individual provider to improve the clinical consultation. By recognizing the role of trauma and its impact on an individual's physical, emotional, and behavioral health, providers and clients can build mutual trust, focus on individual growth, and begin to foster healing.Entities:
Keywords: criminal justice; implementation; patient engagement; primary care; quality of care; trauma; trauma-informed care
Year: 2019 PMID: 30912031 PMCID: PMC6544694 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-018-4783-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Fig. 1Upstream factors that impact healthcare-seeking behaviors and engagement for persons with criminal justice system involvement.
Trauma-Informed Programming in Different Healthcare Domains
| Healthcare domain | Examples of trauma-informed programming | Examples of trauma-informed programming for a patient with justice involvement |
|---|---|---|
| Care environment | Create welcoming, easy to navigate spaces that minimize visual, auditory, or other potentially re-traumatizing triggers | Assess for and minimize things that can be triggering in the clinic environment, ex. uniformed security guards. Include reentry service organization pamphlets or posters to signal welcome and belonging |
| Dialog and interactions between patients, staff, and providers | Focus on positive, accepting language that facilitates patient safety, disclosure, and engagement, and create a supportive work environment for the entire care team | Recognize unfamiliarity with community healthcare systems and explain the reasoning behind common screening questions and what to expect during examinations and procedures. Always obtain consent before examination. Support patients to make choices and regain a sense of control over their bodies and healthcare |
| Patient and provider workflows | Reduce barriers to care access (e.g., insurance coverage, physical access to the clinic), and facilitate efficient and effective patient throughput, provider workflows, and meaningful patient-provider interactions | Medicaid is suspended or revoked while incarcerated and can take time to reinstate upon release; see patients whose Medicaid may not yet be reinstated as services can be billed retroactively |
| Standard operating procedures | Incorporate trauma-informed principles into all aspects of clinic operations, including human resources, budgeting and financial management, and infrastructure, including incorporating trauma survivors and those with lived experience (e.g., CJS involvement) as a part of the care team | Hire peers with experience of the criminal justice system as health educators or community health workers. Budget a small amount of funds to support recently released patients with immediate needs (a meal, clothing, bus passes, etc.), potentially increasing trust and engagement. Make walk-in appointments available to allow patients to see a clinician on their terms |
| Trauma screening and disclosure | While data are limited, some TIC advocates have called for upfront and universal trauma screening, including screening adults for ACEs, which can provide a better understanding of a patient’s trauma history, allow for targeted interventions, and encourage normalization and disclosure as an act of healing.[ | Should you decide to screen for trauma or CJS involvement, ensure that staff are trained in proper screening techniques and appropriate support is available for patients, including behavioral health and social service referral options. In the absence of screening, all staff can be trained in patient-centered communication strategies and how to appropriately respond if a patient discloses CJS involvement |
| Self-regulation and social resilience | Build concrete behavioral modification tools for staff, providers, and clients to manage everyday states of emotional-hyperarousal, facilitate better communication, and strengthen relationships[ | When creating tools and guidance, study perspectives of healthcare inside correctional facilities and understand how these experiences can contribute to a patient’s emotional state and engagement in care when back in the community |