Abstract

Trauma informed care (TIC) is a whole system organisational change process which emerged from the seminal Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study, establishing a strong graded relationship between the number of childhood adversities experienced and a range of negative outcomes across multiple domains over the life course. To date, there has been no systematic review of organisation-wide implementation initiatives in the child welfare system. As part of a wider cross-system rapid evidence review of the trauma-informed implementation literature using systematic search, screening and review procedures, twenty-one papers reporting on trauma-informed implementation in the child welfare system at state/regional and organisational/agency levels were identified. This paper presents a narrative synthesis of the various implementation strategies and components used across child welfare initiatives, with associated evidence of effectiveness. Training was the TIC implementation component most frequently evaluated with all studies reporting positive impact on staff knowledge, skills and/or confidence. The development of trauma-informed screening processes, and evidence-based treatments/trauma focused services, where evaluated, all produced positive results. Whilst weaknesses in study design often limited generalisability, there was preliminary evidence for the efficacy of trauma-informed approaches in improving the mental and emotional well-being of children served by community-based child welfare services, as well as their potential for reducing caregiver stress and improving placement stability.

Highlights

  • IntroductionTrauma informed care (TIC) is a whole system organisational change process which seeks to embed theoretically coherent models of practice across diverse settings and roles, including child welfare, family support, justice, mental health and education

  • As part of a wider cross-system rapid evidence review of the trauma-informed implementation literature using systematic search, screening and review procedures [15], this paper presents a narrative synthesis of the various implementation strategies and components of community-based Trauma informed care (TIC) child welfare initiatives, together with associated evidence of effectiveness

  • Of the 75 relevant papers identified through searching the academic literature, 21 papers reported on evaluations of 17 community-based child welfare initiatives involving frontline social workers, family welfare staff and/or other professionals

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Summary

Introduction

Trauma informed care (TIC) is a whole system organisational change process which seeks to embed theoretically coherent models of practice across diverse settings and roles, including child welfare, family support, justice, mental health and education It emerged from the findings of the seminal Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study in the U.S [1] with subsequent international and UK research establishing the same, strong graded relationship between the number of childhood adversities experienced (inclusive of physical, sexual and emotional abuse, neglect and household adversity), and a wide range of negative outcomes across multiple domains over the life course [2,3,4,5,6]. Public Health 2019, 16, 2365; doi:10.3390/ijerph16132365 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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