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Trauma Sensitive Care

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Title: Trauma Sensitive Care


1
Trauma Sensitive Care
  • What it is
  • Why it matters
  • How we can achieve it
  • Howard Bath
  • Thomas Wright Institute

2
Perspectives on YP in Care
  • Dependent
  • Abuse/neglect
  • Attachment
  • High Risk
  • Strength-Based
  • Trauma

3
Circle of Courage
GENEROSITY INDEPENDENCE BELONGING MASTERY
Research Foundations

  • The Circle of Courage
  • Belonging
  • Opportunity to establish trusting connections
  • Mastery
  • Opportunity to solve problems and meet goals
  • Independence
  • Opportunity to build self control and
    responsibility
  • Generosity
  • Opportunity to show respect and concern

Self-Worth Research Significance The individual
believes I am appreciated. Competence The
individual believes I can solve
problems. Power The individual believes I set
my life pathway. Virtue The individual believes
My life has purpose.
Resilience Research Attachment Motivation to
affiliate and form social bonds Achievement Motiv
ation to work hard and attain excellence Autonomy
Motivation to manage self and exert
influence Altruism Motivation to help and be of
service to others
4
Triune Brain
Logical Brain (Neocortex)
Emotional Brain (Limbic System)
Survival Brain (Brain Stem)
5
The Triune Brain in language
  • Words that reflect the emotional/logical brain
    distinction
  • thoughtless, inconsiderate, mindless, impulsive,
    crime of passion, without malice aforethought vs
    calculating, deliberate, premeditated murder
  • Descriptors of reptilian brain behaviours
  • animal, cold-blooded, predatory

6
The Therapeutic Task
  • Psychotherapy is fundamentally a process
    through which our neocortex learns to exercise
    control over evolutionary old systems (LeDoux,
    1996, p. 21)
  • We want to raise children whose reasoning brain
    can triumph over the impulsive one (Stein and
    Kendall, 2004, p. 12)

7
Hemispheric Specialization
8
  • we are born to form attachmentsour
  • brains are physically wired to develop in tandem
    with anothers, through emotional communication
    beginning before words are spoken
  • The organisation of the developing brain occurs
    in the context of a relationship with another
    self, another brain. This relational context can
    be growth-facilitating or growth inhibiting, and
    so it imprints into the developing right brain
    either a resilienceor a vulnerability (Shore,
    2003, p. xv)

9
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10
Which of the two faces appears happier?
11
Threat and Trauma
  • The Stress response

12
The Stress/Fear Response (adapted from Sapolsky,
2004)
Glucocorticoids trigger the locus coeruleus to
release norepinephrine which communicates with
the amygdala
Amygdala
Locus coeruleus
Amygdala (the danger detector) activates the
HPA axis by initiating the release CRT from the
hypothalamus which stimulates the pituitary in
brain stem
Hypothalamus
Direct sympathetic nervous system
activation Blood pressure increases Heart
rate increases
Senses/reactivity are heightened Peripheral
vision narrows Pupils dilate to take in more
information
Brain stem pituitary
Brain stem releases ACTH which activates the
sympathetic nervous system via the spinal cord
stimulating the adrenal glands
Adrenal glands
Corticotrophin releasing hormone, CRH
Adrenalcorticotrophic hormone, ACTH
Epinephrine (Adrenalin)
Norepinephrine

Glucocorticoids (Cortisol)
Adrenal glands release epinephrine (adrenalin)
and, in prolonged stress, glucocorticoids
13
The Stress/Fear Response
  • Our stress mechanisms operate far more quickly
    than do our conscious, reflective capacities
    this helps to keep us safe.
  • It has been estimated that our safety/stress
    reactions activate in around 6/1000 of a second

14
Problematic Effects of Stress
  • Living in a state on prolonged stress and
    anxiety can lead to the stress mechanisms
    becoming sensitized i.e. developing lower
    thresholds for activation (Sapolsky, Bremner)
    researchers have used the term kindling to
    describe the effect of chronic stress on the
    amygdala.

15
Stress and Memory
16
  • Explicit (or declarative) memories are those
    memories which we can recall and reflect on
  • Implicit memories involve the myriad sensations
    (sounds, smells, feelings, emotions, etc)
    associated with events. They also include what is
    called procedural memory

17
The Danger Detector
18
Amygdala
  • The amygdala appears to have a critical gate
    keeping role determining friend or foe
  • It asses for emotional salience - the danger
    detector triggers the stress and fight or
    flight responses

19
Fear Conditioning
  • Fear conditioning which underlies many
    anxiety-related conditions (e.g. PTSD and
    phobias) mainly involves the amygdala and
    implicit memories
  • Anxiety, fear, or terror are triggered by cues
    (reminders) of the original frightening
    experiences. The cues can be internal (feelings,
    emotions, sensations) or external (sounds,
    smells, sights, certain people etc). The amygdala
    has tagged these as being associated with
    danger this is a largely unconscious process

20
Hippocampus
  • Memories are usually stored in parts of the
    cortex but the hippocampus has a key role in
    organising and linking the various memory
    components. It has a key role in the storage and
    recall of explicit memories
  • The keyboard vs hard disk analogy

21
Stress and Memory
  • We tend to remember events that are associated
    with stress and emotion far more readily than
    those that do not (except if the events are
    overwhelmingly stressful or long-lasting)
  • Our brain remembers sensations and feelings)
    associated with events (implicit memory) even
    when we cannot recall the event consciously
    (explicitly)

22
Stress and Memory
  • An infant or small child does not have
    explicit memory capacities - we usually cannot
    remember anything explicitly prior to around 4
    years of age.
  • However, the infant/small child does have
    implicit capacities - traumatizing events can
    only be recalled implicitly (physiologically
    and emotionally)

23
Memory Overload
  • Hippocampal structures linked with explicit
    memory may atrophy or even die with very high
    and/or sustained flooding by cortisol
    implicit memory does not appear to be affected
    this way (Sapolsky)

24
Dissociation Memory
  • Memories may be impaired by dissociative
    responses e.g. tuning out, floating above,
    fainting, during frightening events (Perry)
  • Dissociative memories are fragmented, condensed,
    and conflated (Stein Kendall)
  • Dissociating from traumatic events can lead to a
    faulty appraisal of the events significance and
    dangerousness

25
Stress, Memory Trauma
26
Types of Trauma
  • Type 1 (simple) from one overwhelming traumatic
    event
  • Type 2 (complex) from ongoing exposure to
    fear/helplessness

27
Trauma and Children
  • Fight or flight responses are usually not
    available to children therefore freeze and
    other dissociative responses are common (Perry)
  • The freeze response has been linked with the
    learned helplessness models in animal studies
    it appears to involve both sympathetic arousal
    and parasympathetic counter-effects or stepping
    on the gas and the brake at the same time

28
Differential Effects of Trauma
  • Interpersonal traumas are likely to have more
    profound effects than impersonal ones
    especially betrayal of trust by attachment
    figures and figures of esteem
  • (van der Kolk)

29
Outcomes of Trauma Formal diagnosed conditions
  • Post traumatic symptomology including PTSD
    (re-experiencing, hyperarousal, hypervigilence,
    avoidance)
  • borderline symptoms as seen in borderline
    personality disorder (acute abandonment anxiety,
    rapid mood swings, identity instability, suicidal
    ideation/gestures, complaints of boredom,
    capricious and reactive aggression, addictive
    behaviours etc)
  • Some sub-types of Oppositional Defiant Disorder
    and Conduct Disorder

30
Outcomes of Trauma
  • Language and other cognitive impairments inc.
    short term memory rigid thinking styles
    executive functions such as planning, weighing
    options, considering outcomes, controlling
    impulses misinterpretation of social cues
    (Perry only 2 of abused children have
    verbalgtperformance scores - 39 have the opposite
    pattern)

31
Outcomes of Trauma
  • The process of reflection, labelling and making
    meaning of events requires language language
    functions are often impaired by trauma. This is
    reflected in words and phrases that are used
  • Speechless unspeakable dumbfounded mute
    terror indescribable dumbstruck words cant
    describe words fail me
  • words cannot express

32
Outcomes of Trauma
  • Very constricted play, impairments of imagination
  • Impairments of empathy chronically aroused
    lower brains gear the child for facing threat do
    not allow the time or energy for the higher brain
    functions involved in empathy
  • A range of somatic and psychiatric problems
    including infections, headaches, stomach aches,
    hyperactivity, depression, phobias
  • Emotional numbing and analgesia associated with
    dissociation and the endogenous opioids
  • Eating disorders are common
  • Substance abuse often self-medicating

33
Outcomes of Trauma
  • The apparently counterintuitive process in which
    children/YP appear to instigate traumatic
    incidents
  • Traumatic re-enactment or compulsive re-exposure
    - an effort to integrate the experience and/or to
    gain control of the traumatic triggers (Terr).
    Understanding compulsive re-exposure and doing
    something about it is one of the great
    challenges of psychiatry (van der Kolk)
  • Addiction to the post-crisis state of
    quiescence involving endogenous opioids some
    generate crises and put themselves in dangerous
    situations to experience this physical and
    emotional state of calm

34
Outcomes of Trauma
  • Loss of trust, hope and sense of agency
  • Loss of thought as experimental action
  • Social avoidance with loss of attachments
  • Lack of future orientation and involvement in
    preparation for the future (van der Kolk, 1996)

35
Outcomes of Trauma
  • The process of making meaning from exposure to
    extreme and prolonged threat
  • Bowlbys notion of the maladaptive working
    models of self and others people are
    dangerous, they cant be trusted, Im not worthy
    of love, Im bad
  • Sullivans description of malevolent
    transformation

36
The Primary Impact of Trauma
  • The lack of or loss of self-regulation is
    possibly the most far-reaching effect of
    psychological trauma in both children and adults
  • The younger the age at which the trauma
    occurred, and the longer its duration, the more
    likely people (are) to have long-term problems
    with the regulation of anger, anxiety and sexual
    impulses (van der Kolk et al., 1993)

37
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38
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39
Trauma, Dysregulation Out-of-Home Care
40
Executive Deficits (BRIEF) YP attending OOHC
Psychiatric clinic (Redoblado-Hodge, 2004)
41
Some UK data on prevalence of psychiatric
symptoms of young people in care
  • Total weighted prevalence rate of psychiatric
    disorders in adolescents in the Oxfordshire care
    system was 67...with 96 of adolescents in
    residential units and 57 in foster care having
    psychiatric disorders (McCann, James, Wilson
    Dunn, BMJ, 1996)

42
Most common MH problems experienced by
adolescents in care
  • Conduct disorder 28
  • Overanxious disorder 26
  • Major depressive episode 23
  • ADHD 14
  • Other depression types 12
  • Avoidant disorder 8
  • Functional psychosis 8
  • Panic disorder 4
  • Bipolar disorder 4
  • Others substance abuse bulimia/anorexia
    nervosa OCD phobias separation anxiety
    disorder

43
Disruptive Behaviour Disorders
  • Most young people come into residential care or
    transition in (any kind of ) care because of
    externalising behaviours such as aggression and
    rule breaking.
  • This is the most common MH diagnosis

44
  • Problems of chronic reactive violence have
    their origins in early life experiences (such as
    early traumas of parental rejection, exposure to
    family violence, and family instability) and/or
    constitutional abnormalities, whereas problems of
    proactive violence have their origins in social
    learning during school years (Dodge et al., 1997)

45
Pain and Pain-based Behaviour
46
Pain-Based Behaviours
  • Challenging behaviours often reflect
    psychoemotional pain grief at losses and
    abandonment persistent anxiety about themselves
    and their situation fear of or even terror about
    a disintegrating present and a hopeless future
    depression and dispiritedness at a lack of
    meaning or sense of purpose in their lives and
    what could be termed psycho-emotional
    paralysis, or a state of numbness and withdrawal
    from the people and world around them
  • (Anglin, 2003, p. 109-110)

47
Responding to Pain with Pain
  • Seldom did careworkers acknowledge or respond
    sensitively to the inner world of the child.
    (They would react to difficult) behaviour by
    making demands of a controlling nature (e.g. get
    a grip on yourself!, or Watch your language
    now!) or giving a warning of possible
    consequences in terms of lost points, time out,
    or withdrawal of privileges Anglin, 2003

48
The Biggest Challenge
  • more than any other dimension of carework, the
    ongoing challenge of dealing with such primary
    pain without unnecessarily inflicting secondary
    pain experiences on the residents through
    punitive or controlling reactions can be seen to
    be the central problem for carework staff
    (Anglin, 2003, 55)

49
The Parallel Process
  • traumatized people are frequently misdiagnosed
    and mistreated in the system Because of their
    characteristic difficulties with close
    relationships, they are vulnerable to become
    re-victimized by caregivers. They may become
    engaged in ongoing, destructive interactions, in
    which thesystem replicates the behaviour of the
    abusive family (Herman 1992)

50
Four pillars of trauma-sensitivity
  • Safety physical and emotional, sanctuary,
    consistency, predictability, honesty,
    transparency, reliability, availability,
    continuity
  • Emotion management tools to assist with
    reflection, awareness, labelling of emotion,
    negotiation - to promote a more
    rational/cognitive style of problem solving
  • Loss empathy and support around the pain of
    multiple losses (family, home, friends, community
    etc)
  • Future generation of hope, belief, competence

51
Safety
52
The Fundamental Human Need
  • SAFETY is the fundamental motivational drive
  • Bowlby safety is the function of attachment
    behaviours
  • Maslow safety is the most fundamental of human
    needs
  • Erickson trust based on safety and comfort is
    the first psychosocial stage of development
  • A lack of physical and emotional safety
    (anxiety, fear) is the defining experience of
    people who have experienced complex trauma

53
Emotion management
54
The Primary Function
  • The primary function of parents can be thought
    of as helping children modulate their own arousal
    by attuned and well-timed provision of playing,
    feeding, comforting, touching, looking, cleaning,
    and resting in short, by teaching them skills
    that will gradually help them modulate their own
    arousal (van der Kolk)
  • What then is the primary function of teachers,
    care workers, programs for troubled kids?

55
The Primary Function
  • How we experience the world, relate to others,
    and find meaning in life are dependent on how we
    have come to regulate our emotions (Siegel, 1999,
    p. 245)

56
The Foundation of Therapeutic Change
57
The Foundation of Change
  • Weve always heard that positive connections and
    relationships are important the difference is
    that there is now hard science confirming it
  • The results are the same whether its mental
    health, education, youth work, psychotherapy

58
Connecting for Change
  • 40 - Extra-therapeutic, client factors
  • 15 - Placebo, expectancy
  • 15 - Technique
  • 30 - Nature of the connection (warmth,
    acceptance, empathy, expectancy)
  • The Heart and Soul of Change (Hubble et al.,
    APA, 1999)

59
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60
Trauma Sensitivity involves
  • Understanding the impact on the child of
    overwhelming experiences of fear and helplessness
  • Understanding how the childs emotions and
    behavioural responses can become re-activated
    here and now
  • Understanding the behavioural sequelae of complex
    trauma including defense mechanisms and the
    development of maladaptive behaviour patterns
  • Responding therapeutically to support and heal
    and to teach adaptive ways of coping with stress
    and anxiety

61
Trauma-Sensitivity Checklist
  • Are all contact staff members familiar with basic
    trauma theory?
  • Are all clients assessed for developmental
    trauma?
  • Are program and intervention models audited for
    trauma sensitivity?
  • Does the issue of physical and emotional safety
    guide placement and co-placement decisions?
  • Do behaviour management tools focus on external
    behaviour manipulation or on understanding
    motivation (the outer or inner child)?

62
Trauma-Sensitivity Checklist
  • Is the focus of behaviour management on teaching
    for change or the infliction of pain?
  • Is co-regulation with the young person the
    guiding principal for crisis management?
  • Is there formal emphasis on post-crisis
    de-briefing to stimulate thinking, promote
    insight and teach new skills?
  • Is the relational basis of therapeutic change
    given priority in staff training, supervision,
    and intervention planning? hbath_at_twi.org.au

  • ACWA Aug17, 2006

63
It is worth any sacrifice, however great or
costly To see eyes that were listless light up
again To see someone smile who seemed to have
forgotten How to smile To see trust reborn in
someone Who no longer believed in anything Or
Anyone Dom Helder Camara
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