Abstract

Purpose: Trauma-exposed persons often experience difficulties accessing medical care, remaining engaged in treatment plans, and feeling psychologically safe when receiving care. Trauma-informed care (TIC) is an established framework for health care professionals, but TIC education for clinicians has not been well examined. To remedy this, the authors conducted a multidisciplinary, scoping literature review to discern best practices for design, implementation, and evaluation of TIC curricula for health care professionals. Method: The research team searched Ovid Medline, Cochrane Library, Elsevier’s Scopus, Elsevier’s Embase, Web of Science, and the Published International Literature on Traumatic Stress database. Two independent reviewers screened 1,824 abstracts and excluded 1,697. After assessing 127 full-text articles, they excluded 76 based on predefined exclusion criteria; subsequently, they identified 4 additional articles through hand searching. Results: Fifty-five studies met inclusion criteria, with medicine being the most common discipline represented. The most prevalent learning objectives were cultivating skills in screening for trauma, responding to disclosures, defining trauma, and understanding trauma’s impact on health. Forty-seven of the studies included curricular evaluations, most commonly pre- and postsurveys. A minority used only postsurveys or a retrospective pre–post survey. The most common survey items included confidence in TIC skills, training content knowledge, participant demographics, and attitudes regarding the importance of TIC. Discussion: Future curricula should include applying a foundational lens of cultural humility, understanding the impacts of marginalization and oppression on individual and collective experiences of trauma, interprofessional collaboration, and incorporating survivors’ voices in education. Additional considerations include mandated reporting, medical record documentation, and vicarious trauma experienced by health care providers. Significance: Although medical school curricula are increasingly including TIC education, best practices in TIC curricula have not been developed. This scoping review lays the groundwork for evidence-based strategies for the design, implementation, and evaluation of TIC curricula in the health professions.

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