Trauma-Informed Care Champions: From Treaters to Healers

“Trauma-informed primary care can transform the caregiving experience of providers from being treaters to being healers.”

– Eddy Machtinger, MD, Director of Women’s HIV Program, UCSF

Why are health care professionals across the nation embracing trauma-informed care? The Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS) posed this question to providers and patients to gather first-hand perspectives on the value of trauma-informed care. The resulting videos, Trauma-Informed Care Champions: From Treaters to Healers, feature practitioners from The Bronx, Philadelphia, and San Francisco who are leading a movement to improve health care for patients who have experienced trauma. The videos, which also include patient perspectives, outline how experiences such as abuse, neglect, and violence impact health, and how trauma can be more effectively acknowledged and addressed in a health care setting.

The following videos are free to use as part of meetings, trainings, and other education or awareness-building activities. Videos should not be edited. Please include the following citation when using videos:

Center for Health Care Strategies. “Video title as described below.” Trauma-Informed Care Implementation Resource Center. Available at: https://www.traumainformedcare.chcs.org/trauma-informed-champions-from-treaters-to-healers/

How to Use These Videos

Building awareness and generating buy-in are foundational steps toward becoming a trauma-informed organization. Use these videos to spread the word about trauma-informed care with key audiences:

  • Senior Leadership – Share with senior decision-makers to demonstrate the value of trauma-informed care and gain buy-in to initiate new programs.
  • Front-Line Staff – Screen at a weekly staff meeting to introduce the concept of trauma-informed care, use to initiate a staff training or discussion session, and/or incorporate into new employee onboarding.
  • Providers – Share with providers to demonstrate how peers across the country are adopting trauma-informed approaches to improve patient outcomes and combat burnout.
  • Patients and Families – Screen at a patient advisory group meeting to launch a discussion on the value of trauma-informed care and begin exploring how it can be implemented to better meet their needs.

The providers featured in these videos are participants in Advancing Trauma-Informed Care, a national initiative supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation aimed at understanding how trauma-informed approaches can be practically implemented across the health care sector.

This four-minute video, Trauma-Informed Care: From Treaters to Healers, provides a compelling snapshot of the value of trauma-informed care from the provider and patient perspective.

This 12-minute video, Trauma-Informed Care: From Treaters to Healers, describes the impact of trauma on health, the benefits of trauma-informed care for patients and providers, and initial steps that individuals and organizations can take to become trauma-informed.

Additional Videos

What is Trauma-Informed Care? Shares information on the lifelong impact of trauma on health, and how trauma-informed care can create a more welcoming environment for patients and staff. (3:30 minutes)

Ignoring trauma in the practice setting can cause patient and provider frustration. Providers share how a trauma-informed approach has helped them address burnout and rediscover joy in practicing medicine. (1:50 minutes)
Trauma-informed care can help improve patient outcomes. Providers and patients discuss how trauma-informed care practices have positively impacted their health. (1:50 minutes)
Trauma-informed care can improve relationships with patients and patient engagement. Learn how trauma-informed care can be used to create more trusting and responsive relationships. (1:40 minutes)
Trauma-informed care does not have to be a burden to adopt. Providers dispel a common misconception, and discuss taking the first steps toward implementing trauma-informed care. (1:40 minutes)

Videos produced by FreshFly and Ruben de Luna Creative. Videos feature the artwork of Ben Volta whose community-inspired mural Wellness at Play lifts up people’s spirits every day at Stephen and Sandra Sheller 11th Street Family Health Services in Philadelphia.

The above videos are free to use as part of meetings, trainings, and other education or awareness-building activities. Videos should not be edited. Please include the following citation when using videos:

Center for Health Care Strategies. “Video title as described above.” Trauma-Informed Care Implementation Resource Center. Available at: https://www.traumainformedcare.chcs.org/trauma-informed-champions-from-treaters-to-healers/

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