Abstract

Although optimal trauma-informed care in inpatient settings is relationally oriented, gender-sensitive, racially and culturally responsive treatment, this often is not the reality. Instead, inpatient settings frequently create experiences of retraumatization, which likely are associated with poor outcomes. This article extends the literature on trauma-informed care by drawing from existing models for working with trauma and providing culturally responsive treatment to apply an integrated approach to the inpatient care setting with a focus on the unique needs and experiences of marginalized survivors of gender-based violence and racial trauma. It details the rationale for and key elements of three related frameworks for trauma-informed care and then offers recommendations for guiding its conceptualization and implementation. Ideally, these practices will be embraced on all inpatient units and particularly with women from marginalized communities who have survived interpersonal and racial trauma. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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