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Traumainformed DV services

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For women with substance abuse and/or mental health issues. Gabriella Grant. Agenda ... Mental Health Issues for Clients. MH and DV rates ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Traumainformed DV services


1
Trauma-informed DV services
  • For women with substance abuse and/or mental
    health issues
  • Gabriella Grant

2
Agenda
  • 900-930         Introductions
  • 930-1045         Trauma and its effects
  • 1045-1100       Break (might be a little later)
  • 1100-1200        Trauma-informed services
  • Volunteer timekeeper?

3
DV MH/SA project
4
TraumaThe connection between domestic violence,
mental health and substance abuse
5
DV Women with multiple vulnerabilities
  • Multiple vulnerabilities simply means that a
    woman leaving a domestically violent situation
    often presents with co-occuring conditions that
    affect her safety, decision-making and priorities
  • early childhood trauma
  • collective historical trauma
  • cognitive impairment
  • mental health issues
  • substance use/abuse
  • health problems
  • HIV/AIDS or other STIs
  • repeated victimization
  • no health insurance
  • low educational attainment
  • poor work history

6
Health Outcomes of Violence Against Women
Partner Abuse Sexual Assault Child Sexual Abuse
Fatal Outcomes
Nonfatal Outcomes
  • Mental Health
  • Post-traumatic stress
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Phobias/panic disorder
  • Eating disorders
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Low self-esteem
  • Substance abuse
  • Physical Health
  • Injury
  • Functional impairment
  • Physical symptoms
  • Poor subjective health
  • Permanent disability
  • Severe obesity
  • Homicide
  • Suicide
  • Maternal mortality
  • AIDS-related
  • Chronic Conditions
  • Chronic pain syndromes
  • Irritable bowel syndrome
  • Gastrointestinal disorders
  • Somatic complaints
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Negative Health
  • Behaviors
  • Smoking
  • Alcohol and drug abuse
  • Sexual risk-taking
  • Physical inactivity
  • Overeating
  • Reproductive Health
  • Unwanted pregnancy
  • STDs/HIV
  • Gynecological disorders
  • Unsafe abortion
  • Pregnancy complications Miscarriages/low birth
    weight
  • Pelvic inflammatory diseases

Source Center for Health and Gender Equity
(CHANGE) 1999
7
Adverse childhood experiences (ACE)
8
ACE Before 18
  • Recurrent physical abuse
  • Recurrent emotional abuse
  • Contact sexual abuse
  • An alcohol and/or drug abuser in the household
  • An incarcerated household member
  • Someone who is chronically depressed, mentally
    ill, institutionalized, or suicidal
  • Mother is treated violently
  • One or no parents
  • Emotional or physical neglect

9
ACEs have a strong influence on
  • Adolescent health
  • Teenage pregnancy
  • Smoking
  • Alcohol abuse
  • Illicit drug abuse
  • Sexual behavior
  • Mental health disorders
  • Risk of victimization
  • Stability of relationships
  • Performance in the workplace

10
ACEs and Suicide Attempts
11
ACEs and Smoking
12
ACEs and Alcoholism
13
ACEs and Teen Sexual Behaviors
14
Mental heath
15
Mental Health Issues among CA Women in DV
Shelters
16
MH and DV rates
  • Depression and IPV 70 vs 13 of women in the
    general population
  • PTSD 55-92 vs. 10.4
  • Anxiety 19-55 vs. 14
  • Phobias 27-36 vs. 10
  • (Helfrich et al, 2008)

17
Substance abuse
18
Continuum of substance use
  • Abstinence
  • Experimental use
  • Responsible or social use
  • Episodic or situational abuse (most DV clients)
  • Chronic abuse
  • Dependency
  • Treatment
  • Relapse
  • Abstinent again
  • Harm reduction

19
Stages of Change
  • Pre-contemplation (Who, me?)
  • Contemplation (Yes but)
  • Its not so bad (denial).
  • I cant (low self-efficacy).
  • I dont care (low self-worth).
  • Preparation
  • Action
  • Relapse (learning opportunity)
  • Maintenance
  • (Prochaska et al. 94, Health Psychology)

20
Substance Abuse Issues among women in DV shelters
21
DV and sub abuse rates
  • 60-75 of women seeking shelter services
    developed problems with their original coping
    mechanisms alcohol and drugs (The Womens Action
    Alliance, Roth, 1991)
  • 42 of Illinois DV shelter residents abused
    alcohol or other drugs (Bennett Lawson, 1994).
  • 50 of the women in an Iowa shelter/safe home
    sample had a lifetime diagnosis of alcohol
    dependence or other drug problems (Downs, 2002).

22
MA-Dependent Women and Trauma/DV
  • When asked about current or previous partners
  • 89 of those in severe violent relationships had
    been sexually, physically, or emotionally abused
    as children.
  • 85 of all severe MA users were abused as
    children.
  • 64 had been prevented from entering or leaving
    the house, seeing friends, or using the phone.
  • 61 had been threatened to be hurt or killed.
  • 20 had been prevented from getting/keeping a job
    or continuing education.
  • 15 had been prevented from seeking medical or
    drug treatment.
  • Data from a broad sample of MA-Dependent women
  • from CA, HI, and MT

23
Prescription for Trouble
  • Women are likely to use prescription medication
    much more often than men
  • 70 of prescriptions for tranquilizers, sedatives
    and stimulants are written for women (Roth, 1991)
  • And psychotropic medication is over-prescribed
    for battered women (Minnesota Coalition for
    Battered Women, 1992)
  • Prescription pain relievers were most commonly
    misused, followed by tranquilizers, stimulants,
    and sedatives. (NIDA 2000)

24

25
DAWN emergency department19972002
  • Selected prescription medications DAWN
  • 1997 2002 Change
  • Hydrocodone 11,570 25,197 117.8
  • Oxycodone 5,012 22,397 346.9
  • Methadone 3,832 11,709 205.6 Morphine
    1,300 2,775 113.5
  • Nonprescription medications
  • Marijuana 64,720 119,472 84.6
  • Cocaine 171,894 207,395 20.7
  • Heroin 70,712 93,519 32.3
  • MDMA (Ecstasy) 637 4,026 532.0

26
Poverty
27
Complicating challenges
28
Poverty is a link
  • Better Homes Fund Report looking at intimate
    partner violence among extremely poor women
  • More likely to have suffered childhood sexual
    abuse
  • More likely to have had a foster care placement
  • Lower current self esteem
  • Partner much more likely to abuse substances
  • Parents more likely to have fought physically
  • Mother much more likely to have been battered
  • The female caretaker (mother) more likely to have
    had mental health problems
  • (2001 Bassuk, et al)

29
Percentage of CALworks Clients with Barriers
  • Mental Health 85.3
  • Alcohol/Drug 60.6
  • Domestic Conflict 55.8
  • Attitude 35.5
  • Education 32.9
  • Children 30.4
  • Work 25.6
  • Medical Problems 22.4
  • Housing 19.6
  • Legal 16.8
  • Transportation 15.9

30
Intergenerational cycle
  • The CalWORKS found that in families facing
    depression, DV and sub abuse problems
  • Children (aged 6 and under) are at 2-5 times
    greater risk for
  • Homelessness
  • Use of food banks
  • Lack of needed medical care
  • Unreliable or unsafe child care
  • Placement in foster care by child welfare
    services

31
Complex DV
  • Sheltered battered women average 8.1 traumatic
    events over lifetime violent, poor lives
    (Humphrey et all 1999)
  • Women in shelter have significantly higher rates
    of depression, PTSD, anxiety, phobias 59 v.
    22 (Helfrich et al 2008)
  • PTSD predicts severity of violence more than
    help-seeking behaviors, helpfulness of behaviors,
    social support tx focusing on PTSD to escape
    cycle of violence (Perez, Johnson 2008)

32
California DV shelters
  • DV shelters should expect that at least
  • 50 of their clients will have a diagnosable MH
    issues
  • 40 of their clients will cope using AOD
  • Most of these clients will have both MH/SA
  • Most have a history of early childhood trauma
  • Most will be very poor
  • Treat trauma and focus on safety

33
Understating traumas aftereffects
34
Triggering Situations for Women Survivors of
Trauma/ Violence
  • Lack of control-powerlessness
  • Threat or use of physical force
  • Observing threats, assaults, others engaged in
    self-harm
  • Isolation
  • Being in a locked room or space
  • Physical restraints - handcuffs, shackles
  • Interacting with authority figures
  • Interacting with men, in general
  • Lack of privacy
  • Removal of clothing strip searches, medical
    exams
  • Being touched pat downs
  • Being watched suicide watch
  • Loud noises
  • Fear based on lack of information
  • Darkness
  • Intrusive or personal questions

35
Behaviors and Symptoms
  • Associated with trauma
  • Multiple layers of clothes
  • Hypervigilence
  • Anonymity of large shelters
  • Fear of shelters
  • Not bathing
  • Not willing to seek medical of dental attention

36
Behaviors and Symptoms
  • Associated with Trauma
  • Aggressiveness
  • Not taking medications
  • Use of drugs and alcohol
  • Participation in the sex trade
  • Self-destructive behavior
  • Suicidality

37
Trauma Symptoms and Substances Associated with
their Relief
Symptom
Substance
  • Depression Cocaine, methamphetamines
  • Anxiety Alcohol tranquilizers
  • Inner turmoil pain Opioids methamphetamines
  • Emotional numbness Cocaine methamphetamines
  • Passivity Alcohol, PCP
  • Excessive anger/rage Alcohol, marijuana,
    opioids
  • Sexual numbness Alcohol amyl nitrate
    hallucinogens, methamphetamines

Harris and Fallot (2001)
38
Negative coping
  • Behaviors are adaptations not pathologies
  • Symptoms are courageous attempts to cope with
    trauma
  • Behaviors, coping and symptoms are clues to
    uncovering ways the woman interprets the world.
  • Resistance, non-compliance and rule-breaking are
  • Windows into the woman
  • Effects of trauma (a trauma response to events)
  • Emerging self-efficacy (good news!!)

39
Positive Coping
  • Initial establishment of safety looks at
    identifying and modeling safe, positive coping
  • Staff as models
  • Shelter as first step toward healthy
    relationships (honesty, boundaries, etc.)
  • Identification of options
  • Agency goals and womans goals in alignment
  • Seeking Safetys 100 safe copings

40
Voluntary Exercise 15 min
  • Positive coping list seeking safety
  • Think of a challenging situation (personal or
    professional)
  • Review coping list
  • What would have worked to make the challenge
    easier?
  • What made you personally feel good right now?
  • Anyone care to share which copings they felt good
    about?

41
Trauma Informed DV Services
  • Whats the deal?

42
Core texts
  • Using Trauma Theory to Design Service Systems
  • Maxine Harris and Roger Fallot, 2001
  • Community Connections, Wash DC
  • http//www.communityconnectionsdc.org/
  • Trauma and Recovery, Judith Herman
  • Beyond Trauma, S Covington
  • Seeking Safety, Lisa Najavits

43
The advocates toolbox
  • Trauma theory and evidence-based practices
  • Harris and Fallot
  • Institute for Health and Recovery
  • Seeking safety (WCDVS)
  • Motivational interviewing
  • Training and practice
  • Strengths-based advocacy
  • Effective program design and PP

44
Dimensions of care
  • Self-care
  • Consumer and staff (direct customer services)
  • Structure and design (program)
  • System interaction (policy/advocacy)

45
Stages of Trauma Recovery
  • Stage One ESTABLISHING SAFETY
  • Securing safety
  • Stabilizing symptoms
  • Fostering self-care
  • Stage Two REMEMBRANCE MOURNING
  • Reconstructing the trauma
  • Transforming traumatic memory
  • Stage Three RECONNECTION
  • Reconciliation with self
  • Reconnection with others
  • Resolving the trauma
  • Judith L. Herman, 1992

46
A paradigm shift?
  • Being informed about trauma
  • To know the history of past and current abuse in
    the lives of the consumer
  • To understand the role that violence and
    victimization play in the lives of women with
    DV/MH/sub abuse
  • To use that understanding to design service
    systems that accommodate the vulnerabilities of
    trauma survivors
  • To allow services to be delivered to facilitate
    consumer participation in treatment.

47
Trauma-informed vs. Traditional
  • Trauma-informed
  • How do I understand this person?
  • Services are strengths-based
  • Minimize risk to consumer, weighing risk to
    providers
  • Services a collaboration between consumer and
    provider
  • Trust and safety earned and demonstrated over
    time
  • Both parties acknowledged for bringing
    information and expertise to the relationship.
  • Traditional
  • How do I understand this symptom/problem?
  • Services are crisis-driven
  • Minimize risk to system/service
  • Consumers perceive services as hierarchical
  • Trust and safety assumed from beginning
  • Can recreate abuse dynamics in which the trauma
    survivor was forced to accept an unequal
    relationship to avoid worse treatment

48
Basic principles
  • The experience of trauma is central and
    pervasive
  • Employ universal precautions a client should
    not have to disclose to be treated as if they are
    survivors of trauma (informed consent)
  • Attitudes and behaviors are often attempts to
    cope with the effects of trauma
  • The goal of treatment is safety

49
The agency assessment
  • Go over silently or go over together
  • Is there anything in the assessment that pops
    out?
  • What should we focus on?

50
A trauma-informed DV agency
  • Welcoming and appropriate to the special needs of
    DV survivors with histories of trauma, mental
    health and substance abuse
  • Understanding that violence, abuse and subsequent
    coping have altered her worldview.
  • Understanding her and her situation and offering
    new modes of relating and coping
  • Connected to a larger system of care that is
    likewise trauma-informed and integrated.

51
Administrative commitment
  • Departs from the outlook that violence, addiction
    and mental health problems form a complex and
    interrelated network of connections within the
    lives of women and within the experience of any
    given woman.
  • Commitment begins with the people who allocate
    resources, set priorities and sponsor or design
    programs that assert that trauma and its
    aftermath are an important part of what ails
    people.

52
Universal screening
  • Screening all individuals seeking services to
    determine whether they have a trauma history
  • Example SBCS universal screen
  • It gets everyone thinking about trauma
  • Agency sees itself as a place where histories of
    violence and victimization matter.

53
Training and Education
  • All staff from receptionists to ED have an
    overview of trauma and its effects
  • Better a general introduction for the many than a
    in-depth knowledge for the few.
  • What is Trauma by Community Connections
  • Example An Intro to Trauma for Women on Short
    Stay

54
Hiring Practices
  • Hire one or two trauma champions
  • Front-line worker who thinks trauma first
  • How is this womans situation/behavior related to
    violence or abuse?
  • How can I relate to her in a trauma-informed way
    about her situation/behavior?
  • What can we learn from the situation/behavior?
  • Can appear overly-zealous but over time the clear
    message influences others

55
Questions?
  • Next steps
  • Additional training needs
  • Coordination and connection

56
Thank you!
  • Gabriella Grant, Project Manager
  • ONTRACK Program Resources, Inc.
  • 916-267-4367
  • g.grant_at_ontrackconsulting.org
  • www.getontrack.org
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