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Recovering from trauma-informed care

"Falsely accused family members had their convictions overturned based upon expert evidence regarding false memory syndrome caused by hypnotically induced memories or improper questioning of child witnesses. A series of malpractice suits were filed against trauma recovery therapists based upon negligent use of hypnosis, failure to recognize the effects of suggestion, and improper diagnosis. Juries awarded some of the highest damages ever recorded for psychiatric malpractice....

"And this all seemed like a remote memory until recently, when my state started requiring all public mental health clinicians to receive education in trauma-informed care....

"Trauma-informed care requires a clinician to be mindful that many psychiatric patients have had significant exposure to sexual and physical abuse, domestic violence, and other life events that make a person sensitive to being retraumatized. Trauma-informed care means being cautious and conservative with regard to the use of physical interventions or other measures that could inadvertently reenact a previous traumatic event...."

http://www.clinicalpsychiatrynews.com/views/shrink-rap-news/blog/recovering-from-trauma-informed-care/eedf65d9d570eb29fcf416c66def7fef.html



 

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Chris, I agree with you!  After reading this article, it sounded like the author considered herself an "expert" in the trauma-informed care field.  It seems she is anything but that.  And you add the whole False Memory Syndrome slant (actually the implication that the Syndrome is real and plays a real part in a patient's life), and you've got a really dangerous sharing of ideas that are completely misleading (not good journalism either). 

I wanted to be sure to leave a comment on this story. I found it scary how this author interpreted trauma-informed care. Sadly I'm not surprised she works in psychiatry. So many people in psychiatry are about wanting to fix and have power over their patients; sadly it can be a common trait of caregivers in many professions. Psychiatrists are a group, though, who routinely retraumatize their "patients" b/c of their training and worldview. She definitely epitomizes the us-v.-them framework and seems to miss the point of TIC. Frightening is what I thought after reading this article.

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