Trauma-Informed Care

Trauma is the exposure to one or more events that overload the brain. It includes later internalization of many feelings—including powerlessness, helplessness, and loss of safety—and can lead to heightened stress and anxiety. Trauma can be individual (e.g., losing a family member) or collective (e.g., experiencing a pandemic or natural disaster).

Mental health needs of practitioners, as well as clients, patients, and students have increased in recent years. The American Psychological Association’s (APA) 2024 Stress in America poll revealed the top stressors as being those related to politics, health care, violence and crime, and the environment.

A trauma-informed model of care ensures the emotional and physical safety of those receiving services and the wellness of those providing such services. This model emphasizes the need for behavioral health practitioners and their professional organizations to recognize the prevalence and pervasive impact of trauma on their lives and on the lives of the people they serve—and to develop trauma-sensitive or trauma-responsive services.

ASHA Virtual Town Halls on Trauma

Supporting Your Well-Being
In this discussion, panelists describe the differences between wellness, resiliency, and secondary trauma, and identify strategies and tools to mitigate and anticipate burnout, compassion fatigue, and secondary trauma.

Discussing Trauma-Informed Care With Clients, Patients, and Students
Panelists share ASHA and other resources—as well as tools and strategies that assistants, audiologists and SLPs can use to provide trauma-informed care in clinical practice.

School Safety: A Town Hall for Educational Audiologists and SLPs
Panelists discuss topics such as emergency procedures and safety drills, building and environmental safety, trauma-informed care, and best practices to safeguard the well-being of students with communication disorders.

Resources on Trauma

Resources for Audiologists

ASHA Resources

Additional Audiology Resources

Resources for SLPs Working With Children and Youth

These ASHA resources may be helpful in supporting your clinical service delivery for children and families. Additional resources are also helpful with interprofessional education and interprofessional practice (IPE/IPP).

ASHA Resources

Additional SLP Resources

Resources for SLPs Working With Adults

ASHA Resources

Additional Resources

Resources on Mental Health

ASHA Corporate Partners