Explores ways a juvenile justice professional can improve the impact of their work through family partnering, why family partnership is critical to trauma-informed care, and how partnership can improve a juvenile justice professional’s effectivene
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Provides a trauma-informed integrated healthcare model for conceptualizing young children exposed to violence and other traumatic stressors.
Assesses the mental health component of a school’s crisis and emergency preparedness plan.
Outlines the need for trauma-informed screening in juvenile justice settings.
Describes child and adolescent trauma exposure and psychosocial functioning among NCTSN care recipients in residential care.
Describes what comprehensive care for children in the child welfare system looks like.
The development of secondary traumatic stress is recognized as a common occupational hazard for professionals working with traumatized children.
Even in the closest of families, it is sometimes hard to remember that family members may have different reactions to the same traumatic event.
The American Psychiatric Association (APA) proposes to include a new grief disorder—Prolonged Grief Disorder—in its forthcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5-Text Revised (DSM-5-TR), which is scheduled for release in 2021.
The experience of trauma takes away choice and control. The trauma-informed healing environment maximizes opportunities for choice and control.