Addressing Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health through Training and Practice
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Trauma-Informed Approaches
1.2. Trauma-Informed Principles
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Community Engagement Approaches
2.2. Equitable and Inclusive Processes
2.3. Equitable and Inclusive Outcomes
2.4. Connecting Public Health Approaches with Trauma-Informed Principles
2.5. Incorporating Trauma-Informed Principles into Public Health Curricula
2.6. The Flint Water Crisis as a Learning Example
3. Results
3.1. Trauma-Informed Principles for Community Engagement in Public Health
3.2. Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health with Examples from the Flint Water Crisis
3.3. Other Strategies for Integrating Trauma-Informed Principles into Public Health Curricula and Practice: Development of Community Engaged Public Health Courses
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Public Health Approach | Trauma-Informed Principles | Mutual Intent |
---|---|---|
Community Engagement | Trustworthiness and transparency (ensure understanding with respect) Collaboration and mutuality (rebalance power differentials) Empowerment, voice, and choice (strengths-focused) | Acknowledging community experiences as expertise Use clear and shared language Recognize diversity in expertise of impacted individuals Raise concerns that would otherwise be overlooked |
Equitable and Inclusive Processes | Safety (sense of control) Peer support (relationship) | Ensure decisions yield personal and population level improvements Incorporate contextual experience as formal information in decision-making Use shared knowledge to improve sustainable decision-making |
Equitable and Inclusive Health Outcomes | Recognizing cultural, historical, and gender issues (avoid stereotypes) | Examine multiple definitions and metrics of improvement |
Competency Area: Leadership | The focus is to create a vision, empower others, foster collaboration, and guide decision making utilizing negotiation and mediation skills to address organizational and community challenges |
In Class Reflection Questions | Did decision-makers engage (or dismiss) groups of people experiencing a common health concern? Did they work together to find the problem and identify solutions? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Community Engagement Trust and Transparency Collaboration and Mutuality |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | While citizens and activists presented local officials with clear evidence of discolored water, a citizen–academic scientist partnership was established to facilitate independent data collection about lead levels Discussions were needed where all parties were heard, experiences were validated, and respect for community expertise and their lived experiences was demonstrated |
Summary Points for Student Learning | Leaders must ensure we have participatory engagement, transparency, collaboration, and mutuality to respond to public health concerns. These features are necessary to clearly describe the public health problem, potential actions, and identify potential consequences related to next steps |
Competency Area: Planning and Management | This area focuses on community assessment of health while applying awareness of cultural values and practices in the design or implementation of public health policies or programs and evaluation of programs. The area addresses the design of population-based policies, programs, or interventions. Also addressed is budget and resource management |
In Class Reflection Questions | Do we have preparedness plans for potential public health crises? How do we integrate lessons from previous similar events? Do we have adequate resources to mitigate negative effects of local crises? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Equitable and Inclusive Process Trust and Transparency Recognizing Cultural, Historical, and Gender Issues |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | The long history of social and economic disinvestment and high community distrust in the city of Flint influenced community expectations around public health. The crisis weakened community preparedness to mitigate damage related to the water crisis. Resources need to be distributed according to the problem severity in seeking parity when the goal is community health To achieve public health goals that are relevant, practitioners must understand and acknowledge the historical, societal, governmental, and economic trauma of the community. For example, for years, community members were inadequately compensated for their work on community problems, often without receiving payment or lesser pay for the same work that researchers, community organizations, and other officials received for doing the same work |
Summary Points for Student Learning | Vulnerable communities with a history of inequitable health outcomes will need additional resources to address existing and arising problems. Health improvement goals must account for existing community health status. This work should also address historical and external initiatives that were framed to be helpful but contributed to community disenfranchisement from broken promises |
Competency Area: Evidence-Based Approaches and Policies | This area focuses on application of epidemiological methods and the collection, analysis, and interpretation of both quantitative and qualitative data collection methods for public health research, policy, or practice. |
In Class Reflection Questions | What are the different implications of the data we have available? Why will residents volunteer their personal health data? How are my beliefs contributing to my interpretation of the data? Have we considered context in the data analysis and interpretation? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Equitable and Inclusive Process Safety |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | The assessment protocol for identifying excess lead and contaminant exposure did not address the expectations of those most impacted. Residents consumed water from their household tap, but contaminant assessment happened at the water source. The assessment process required modification because it did not consistently reflect the water quality as experienced by the residents. Household water infrastructure was damaged by water contaminants and lowered water quality after treatment protocols were put in place. Residents needed clear rationale about allowable risks with exposure to dangerous conditions. |
Summary Points for Student Learning | One data source or data collection method can generate different implications for policy makers and community stakeholders. Personal perceptions of the relevance and value of different data can bias the interpretation of results. Defining safety, particularly about exposures, can vary significantly for policy makers and the consumers who experience related health consequences. |
Competency Area: Policy | The focus is to address the policy making process, coalition, and partnership building to influence public health outcomes. Ethics, advocacy for political, social, or economic policies and programs that will improve health in diverse populations and the evaluation of policies for their impact on public health and health equity are addressed. |
In Class Reflection Questions | Are policies being used to restrict accessibility to solutions across different audiences? Are policies going to be enforced to yield similar outcomes across audiences? How will the policies be enforced? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Equitable and Inclusive Outcomes Empowerment, Voice and Choice |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | Local workgroups collaborated with state officials to revise the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act in 2018. The revision modified the Lead and Copper Rule that lowers the action level for lead in drinking water from 15 to 12 parts per billion, effective 2025. |
Summary Points For Student Learning | Several partners, including people from affected groups, should be involved in deciding the ideal outcomes to work toward. Public health leaders share in the responsibility to maintain spaces for advocacy—with and on behalf of—community members. When there are multiple ideal outcomes, the collaborators can develop—and commit to—plans that work toward the set of ideal outcomes. |
Competency Area: Public Health and Health Care Systems | Addresses the organization, structure, and function of health care, public health, and regulatory systems across national and international settings Addressed here are the means by which structural bias, social inequities, and racism undermine health and create challenges to achieving health equity at organizational, community, and societal levels. |
In Class Reflection Questions | What will health care systems require to address this public health issue? Are these efforts centered on primary, secondary, or tertiary prevention? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Equitable and Inclusive Process Collaboration and Mutuality |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | Clinical research identified the public health problem with objective data. Primary prevention initiatives were implemented in community and clinic settings to promote health and positive health behaviors. Additional clinical screening services were warranted to identify and treat adults and children affected by lead exposure. Mental health services were necessary to address psychological stress for parents and children. |
Summary Points for Student Learning | Decision making processes can benefit from cross-disciplinary perspectives to identify necessary resources to achieve the intended outcomes. Decision making should include the people, institutions, and agencies that will be expected to act. We need to acknowledge and plan for resource limitations and the related consequences. Disjointed multi-system efforts will be the most confusing for community members. Some services will be duplicated to ensure reach into different sub-communities. |
Competency Area: Communication | The focus is on audience appropriate communication strategies and, specifically, the importance of cultural competence in communicating public health content. The importance is to whom we communicate the public health message, the appropriateness and validity of the messages communicated, and how those messages are disseminated. |
In Class Reflection Questions | Was messaging consistent or tailored to different audiences? Are the expected action steps the same for different audiences? Is there shared understanding about the setting, problems, and potential solutions? |
Public Health-Trauma-Informed Principles to Integrate | Equitable and Inclusive Process Peer Support Safety |
Classroom Translation and Discussion | |
Reflections from the FWC | For persons managing lead-related health problems, improving the standard may be more meaningful with their children and families; for people unaffected by lead-related health problems, the attention to the water quality standards may appear trivial without more discussion. The messaging about allowable risks helps consumers understand the next action steps. The information also needed to be tailored to different conditions and with different dissemination approaches (considering language, literacy, media exposure, etc.). |
Summary Points for Student Learning | Policies and standards can have different implications across community subgroups. Communications have to clearly describe how the standards might require different subsequent action steps to reach meaningful and acceptable solutions. An inclusive set of partners is needed to decide on the best outcomes for the community. Such decisions cannot be derived solely from the preferences of any one group or audience. |
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Parker, S.; Johnson-Lawrence, V. Addressing Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health through Training and Practice. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 8437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148437
Parker S, Johnson-Lawrence V. Addressing Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health through Training and Practice. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(14):8437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148437
Chicago/Turabian StyleParker, Shan, and Vicki Johnson-Lawrence. 2022. "Addressing Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health through Training and Practice" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 14: 8437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148437
APA StyleParker, S., & Johnson-Lawrence, V. (2022). Addressing Trauma-Informed Principles in Public Health through Training and Practice. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(14), 8437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148437