| Literature DB >> 35679503 |
Taylor Brown1, Henry Ashworth2, Michelle Bass3, Eve Rittenberg4, Nomi Levy-Carrick5, Samara Grossman5, Annie Lewis-O'Connor4, Hanni Stoklosa6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Trauma exposure is a highly prevalent experience for patients and clinicians in emergency medicine (EM). Trauma-informed care (TIC) is an effective framework to mitigate the negative health impacts of trauma. This systematic review synthesizes the range of TIC interventions in EM, with a focus on patient and clinician outcomes, and identifies gaps in the current research on implementing TIC.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35679503 PMCID: PMC9183774 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2022.1.53674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; TIC, trauma-informed care.
Data extraction.
| Author and date | Country | Specific intervention | Design | Study participants | Number of participants | Focus | Facility type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Educational interventions | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Carter-Snell 2020 | Canada | Needs assessment and educational intervention (EESAS) | Participatory action approach | Communities (leaders and stake holders), police, EMS, and ED clinicians | 5 Communities, and 290 Clinicians | Sexual assault | Emergency departments, prehospital |
| Chandramani 2020 | United States | Needs assessment and educational intervention (SANE) | Needs assessment, education intervention | EM nurses, residents and attendings | 95 (41 Nurses, 34 Residents 20 Attendings) | Sexual assault | An urban academic emergency department |
| Cole 2014 | United States | Educational intervention to decrease use of restraints in ED | Case study | EM nurses and emergency physicians | 6 nurses in pilot phase, then “all staff” | Psychologic, mental health | Urban tertiary emergency department |
| Hoysted 2018 | Australia and New Zealand | Web-based training on general TIC principles for pediatric patients | Pilot parallel superiority randomized controlled trial | EM nurses and emergency physicians | 71 (65 Nurses, 6 | Universal precaution | Emergency departments |
| Hall 2016 | Australia | Modular didactic education on TIC and mental health in ED | Exploratory research with a mixed methods design | EM nurses | 34 Nurses | Psychologic, mental health | Emergency department (urban & rural) |
|
| |||||||
| TIC-based programs and protocols | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Corbin 2010 | United States | Assessment, case management, mentoring, psychoeducational groups, case review | Commentary | Youth (ages 8–30) | NA | Violence | Level 1 trauma center, urban children’s hospital |
| Giles 2019 | United States | TIC assessment and intervention for suicide prevention | Randomized Control trial | Youth | 181 | Suicide and self harm | Tertiary children’s hospital |
| Lakatos 2014 | United States | TIC response to the Boston Marathon bombings | Commentary | Victims of trauma; clinicians | NA | Violence | Level 1 trauma center |
| Stolbach 2017 | United States | TIC screening, support, education, and intervention | Commentary | Youth | NA | Violence | Pediatric emergency department |
| Tiller 2020 | United States | TIC-based protocol for victims of human trafficking (HEAL Toolkit) | Commentary | High-risk patients for trafficking | NA | Human trafficking | Tertiary emergency department |
EMS, emergency medical services; ED, emergency department; EM, emergency medicine; TIC, trauma-informed care.
Major quantitative and qualitative findings for included studies.
| Author and date | Specific intervention | Quantitative findings | Qualitative findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education | |||
|
| |||
| Carter-Snell 2020 | Needs assessment and educational intervention (EESAS) | - Comfort providing sexual assault services significantly improved even at 6-month surveys (P <0.01) in emergency clinicians | - Enhanced collaboration across services and issues with ongoing turnover of personnel |
| Chandramani 2020 | Needs assessment and educational intervention (SANE) | - Significant improvement in knowledge of elements of assault history 67% to 93% (P < 0.05) and comfort in ability to take history 41% to 86% (P <0.01) in ED residents. | - In pre-intervention free response, nine participants mentioned a lack of training and education as a barrier to providing better care |
| Cole 2014 | Educational Intervention to decrease use of restraints in ED | - Initially, 15 to 20 episodes of restraints being used per month, which decreased to no episodes by the end of the intervention. | -Changing the culture through staff understanding of trauma-informed care was key in improving the patient outcomes. |
| Hoysted 2018 | Web-based training on general TIC principles for pediatric patients | - Training group had significantly greater knowledge following training and at follow-up than the control (P <.001) | - Participants liked the online format, found the training to be interesting and informative, and felt the training increased their insight and awareness |
| Hall 2016 | Modular didactic education on TIC and mental health in ED | - ED nurses reported more confidence in their ability to talk to patients about traumatic experiences (P = 0.001, r = 0.41), respond to disclosures of family violence (P = 0.001, r = 0.41), and understand how their current nursing practice is trauma informed (P = 0.001, r = 0.53) | - Participants had an increased openness to ask questions about trauma and listen to patients’ responses |
| TIC-based programs and protocols | |||
| Corbin 2010 | Assessment, case management, mentoring, psychoeducational groups, case review | N/A | Authors concluded a combination of In-hospital peer counseling starting in the ED, outpatient follow-up with home visits to address educational, employment, and behavioral health needs, leads to better all- around care and preventing of future incidents of community violence |
| Giles 2019 | TIC assessment and intervention for suicide prevention | - Patients who received the intervention were significantly more likely to attend outpatient treatment compared with usual care; 79 families (88.8%) received at least one care linkage contact compared to zero in the non-intervention group | - Authors concluded that adding the trauma screening helped to provide trauma-informed care and to link youth directly to trauma- specific, evidenced-based treatments from the ED. |
| Lakatos 2014 | TIC response to the Boston Marathon bombings | N/A | - A team of psychiatric advanced practice nurse using a TIC framework were able to provide comprehensive care to patients, their families, and staff after the Boston Marathon bombings starting in the ED. |
| Stolbach 2017 | TIC screening, support, education, and intervention | N/A | - A TIC-based clinic that first reached out in the ED helped patients recover from the mental harm caused by community violence. |
| Tiller 2020 | TIC-based Protocol for Victims of Human Trafficking (HEAL Toolkit) | N/A | - The development of a TIC standardized protocol ensured that survivors of human trafficking and at-risk patients were treated appropriately and in a standardized manner regardless of the experience of the clinician. |
TIC, trauma-informed care; EMS, emergency medical services; ED, emergency department; EESAS, Enhanced Emergency Sexual Assault Services; SANE, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners.
Unique trauma-informed care interventions by theme.
| Interventions | Publications including intervention |
|---|---|
| Education | |
| Educational needs assessment | 35–37, 39 |
| Education through didactic lecture | 35–38, 40, 41 |
| Education through online modules | 39 |
| Education through standardized patient exercises | 36 |
| Tracking clinician outcomes (knowledge, confidence) | 35, 36, 37, 39, 41 |
| Tracking patient outcomes | 35,37 |
| Education on trauma impacts | 35–39, 42 |
| Education on TIC provision for survivors of sexual assault | 35, 36 |
| Education on mental health and TIC | 37, 41 |
| Education on pediatric traumatic stress | 39 |
| Collaboration | |
| Participatory action model | 35 |
| Educational content production collaboration | 36, 38 |
| Interprofessional collaboration | 35–38, 40, 42 |
| Collaboration between physician specialties | 36, 40, 44 |
| Collaboration with community organizations | 35, 36,38, 40, 44 |
| Collecting patient perspectives | 38 |
| Coordinating outpatient care and follow-up | 38, 40, 43, 44 |
| Safety | |
| Immediate safety assessment | 38, 40, 43, 44 |
| Safety planning prior to discharge | 38, 40, 43, 44 |
| Trauma screening | 38, 40, 43, 44 |
| Psychological first aid for patients and staff | 42 |
| Direction to additional resources and appropriate escalation of care | 38, 41–43 |
| Enhanced patient privacy | 40 |
| ED lockdown with security threat | 40 |
| Leadership | |
| Engage community leaders | 35, 38 |
| Engage hospital leadership | 37, 42 |
| TIC Protocols | |
| Violence intervention and prevention programs | 38, 44 |
| Human trafficking | 40 |
| Environmental Analysis | |
| Analysis of department layout | 35, 37 |
| Analysis of patient care areas | 35, 37 |
| Peer support | |
| Patient peer support groups | 38, 42 |
| Staff peer support groups | 42 |
TIC, trauma-informed care.