Community-Partnered Training in Trauma-Informed Primary Care for Patients Experiencing Reentry From Incarceration: A Pilot Training Study.

IF 3 Q1 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE Journal of Primary Care and Community Health Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/21501319241312577
Lauren E Szkodny, Mahlet A Yared, Shoshana H Bardach, Joseph Lascaze, Randy Stevens, Anna M Adachi-Mejia, Milan F Satcher
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Abstract

Introduction/objectives: Patients returning to the community from incarceration (ie, reentry) are at heightened risk of experiencing trauma when interacting with the healthcare system. Healthcare professionals may not recognize patients' trauma reactions or know how to effectively respond. This paper describes the development and pilot evaluation of a single-session training to prepare primary care teams to deliver trauma-informed care (TIC) to patients experiencing reentry.

Methods: A multidisciplinary team including community members with lived experience engaged in a multiphase human-centered design process that incorporated interviews, discussions, and a participatory process to design and evaluate a single-session interactive pilot training targeting providers' attitudes toward formerly incarcerated patients and confidence to deliver TIC.

Results: Both pre- and post-training surveys were completed by 12 TIC training attendees, which included primary care providers and staff. Trainees reported significant increases in confidence to reduce potentially re-traumatizing practices and improved attitudes toward formerly incarcerated individuals. They also expressed interest in receiving additional TIC training and learning how best to care for and meet the needs of persons with a history of incarceration. Trainees described the panel of community members with lived experience as one of the most rewarding aspects of the training.

Conclusion: Centering people with lived experience in the training design and delivery produced a single-session TIC training that was both well-received and effective. Our TIC training helped primary care providers and staff move from being merely informed on trauma to having the self-efficacy to prevent and respond to trauma reactions during encounters with all patients, particularly those with a history of incarceration.

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社区合作培训创伤知情初级保健的病人经历从监禁:试点培训研究。
前言/目标:从监禁返回社区(即再入)的患者在与卫生保健系统互动时经历创伤的风险更高。医疗保健专业人员可能不认识到病人的创伤反应,也不知道如何有效地应对。本文描述了一个单次培训的发展和试点评估,以准备初级保健团队提供创伤知情护理(TIC)给重新进入的患者。方法:一个多学科团队,包括有生活经验的社区成员,参与多阶段以人为中心的设计过程,包括访谈、讨论和参与式过程,设计和评估一个单阶段互动试点培训,目标是提供者对前监禁患者的态度和提供TIC的信心。结果:12名参加TIC培训的人员完成了培训前和培训后的调查,其中包括初级保健提供者和工作人员。受训人员报告说,他们对减少潜在的再创伤行为的信心显著增强,对以前被监禁的人的态度也有所改善。他们还表示有兴趣接受额外的拘留中心培训,学习如何最好地照顾和满足有监禁史的人的需要。受训人员将有实际经验的社区成员小组描述为培训中最有价值的方面之一。结论:以有生活经验的人为中心进行培训设计和交付,形成了一种既受欢迎又有效的单期TIC培训。我们的TIC培训帮助初级保健提供者和工作人员从仅仅了解创伤到具有自我效能,以预防和应对在遇到所有患者时的创伤反应,特别是那些有监禁史的患者。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
2.80%
发文量
183
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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