4.5 Article

'What would a trauma-informed mental health service look like?' Perspectives of people who access services

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 495-505

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/inm.12813

Keywords

carer; co‐ design; consumer; qualitative; trauma‐ Informed Care

Funding

  1. New South Wales Agency for Clinical Innovation

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The findings of this study illustrate that consumers and family members in Australian mental health services believe that trauma-informed care requires mental health staff to have a greater understanding of trauma, provide opportunities for collaboration, establish trust and safety, offer diverse models of care, and ensure consistency and continuity of care.
Trauma-informed care is an approach to the delivery of mental health care based on an awareness of the high prevalence of trauma in the lives of people accessing mental health services, the effects of trauma experiences and the potential for trauma or re-traumatization to occur in the context of care. Across Australia, inquiries and reports have increasingly indicated an urgent need for mental health services to become trauma-informed. However, how Australian mental health services should deliver trauma-informed care is not well documented. Efforts towards trauma-informed care in any setting require engagement with those who receive care. This qualitative study used an experience-based co-design methodology to explore the perspectives of consumers of mental health services in Australia and their family members, in relation to the question 'what would a trauma-informed mental health service look like?' Focus groups were held with consumers (n = 10) and carers (n = 10). Thematic analysis of transcripts identified that consumers and carers consider that trauma-informed care requires increased awareness of trauma amongst mental health staff, opportunities to collaborate in care, active efforts by services to build trust and create safety, the provision of a diversity of models and consistency and continuation of care. The findings provide important new information about the experiences of Australian service users and have implications for the implementation of trauma-informed care across settings.

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