Applied Behavioral Analysis within a Traumainformed Framework - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Applied Behavioral Analysis within a Traumainformed Framework

Description:

Department of Child and Family Studies. Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute ... offering caregivers and staff tools that promote pro-social skill ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1005
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: Doll8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Applied Behavioral Analysis within a Traumainformed Framework


1
Applied Behavioral Analysis within a
Trauma-informed Framework
Victoria Hummer, MSW, LCSW vhummer_at_fmhi.usf.edu K
imberly Crosland, Ph.D. kcrosland_at_fmhi.usf.edu
Norín Dollard, Ph.D. dollard_at_fmhi.usf.edu Depart
ment of Child and Family Studies Louis de la
Parte Florida Mental Health Institute
2
Trauma What is it?
  • Trauma can result from experiences of violence.
    Trauma includes physical, sexual and
    institutional abuse, neglect, intergenerational
    trauma and disasters that induce powerlessness,
    fear, recurrent hopelessness and a constant state
    of alert.

-National Center on Trauma-Informed Care
3
Complex trauma
  • A subset of children experience multiple traumas
    simultaneously or experience trauma chronically
    early in life and these experiences impede
    appropriate development.
  • Because of neurological rewiring in the brain as
    a result of these traumas, children who
    experience complex trauma may suffer an impaired
    ability to self-regulate and changes in the ways
    in which they react to environmental cues. This,
    in turn, may result in mis diagnoses such ADHD,
    ODD, etc.

4
Adverse Childhood Events Study
  • Trauma markedly increases the risk of mental
    health and substance abuse problems, as well as,
    obesity, cardiac problems and even premature
    death.
  • Experiencing a single traumatic event increases
    the likelihood that an individual will experience
    additional traumatic events, often through
    increased risk of victimization.
  • Anda, Felitti, Bremner, Walker, Whitfield, Perry
    et al (2006)

5
ACE study findings
N17,337 http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ACE/prevalence
.htm
6
Trauma why does it matter?
  • General population
  • Estimates of lifetime exposure to traumatic
    events from the National Comorbidity Survey were
    as high as 61 of men and 51 of women (Kessler
    et al, 1995).
  • Vulnerable populations
  • Children in the child welfare system almost by
    definition have suffered trauma, often multiple
    traumatic events and 50-75 exhibit behaviors or
    symptoms that need mental health treatment
    (Landsverk et al, 2009).

7
Trauma why does it matter?
  • Children schools
  • Exposure to violence has been associated with
    lower IQs and reading ability (Delaney-Black et
    al, 2002) lower GPA attendance (Hurt et al,
    2001), and lower graduation rates (Grogger,
    1997).

8
Trauma why does it matter?
  • Juvenile justice
  • Rates of posttraumatic stress disorder range as
    high as 50 (Wolpaw Ford, 2004) and more than
    90 (Abram et al 2004) of youth in detention
    reported experiencing at least one traumatic
    event.

9
Trauma-informed Systems 8
  • Integrate an understanding of trauma, substance
    abuse and mental illness.
  • Involve consumers in designing/evaluating
    services.
  • Acknowledge that the effects of trauma can change
    the way in which victims perceive their
    environment, and in how they interact and react
    to the world.
  • Create a collaborative relationship between
    providers and consumers, and place priority on
    consumer safety, choice and control.
  • Focus on empowerment and emphasize strengths.

8 Adapted from Ohio Legal Rights Service
(2007). A closer look Trauma-informed
treatment in behavioral health settings.
http//olrs.ohio.gov/other/trauma.pdf. Downloaded
6/1/2009.
10
What is common to both trauma-informed care and
ABA?
  • Changing the kid isnt enough, you have to change
    the systems around him or her.
  • Change the environments where children live, go
    to school, receive healthcare or receive mental
    health care.
  • Change interactions between children and their
    parents or caregivers

11
Applied Behavior Analysis through a
Trauma-Informed Care lens
  • Trauma-informed care principles help to explain
    the etiology of behavior, decreasing reactivity
    on the part of caregivers staff, setting the
    stage for empathy attunement
  • Applied behavior analysis
  • examines the function of behavior, offering
    caregivers and staff tools that promote
    pro-social skill development positive
    interactions.
  • Origin etiology of behavior
  • Function of behavior

12
  • People who work with trauma survivors need a
    framework and tools!
  • How do we merge both theoretical models to
    improve practice implementation?

13
What is the connection between trauma-informed
care and ABA?
  • Both address the following as essential to
    practice
  • Connect - Focus on Relationships
  • Protect - Promote Safety Trustworthiness
  • Respect - Engage in Choice Collaboration
  • Teach Reinforce (Redirect) Encourage
    Skill-Building Competence

14
Connect Building Relationships
  • Trauma, particularly when in childhood, impacts
    ones ability for healthy attachment11
  • Trauma interventions are person-centered,
    relationship-focused, individualized, and family
    driven12.
  • Many approaches focused on forming relationships
    and actively building mental representations of
    these relationships in the childs brain 13.

11 Kinniburgh, K.J., Blaustein, M., Spinazzola,
J., van der Kolk B. (2005). Attachment,
Self-Regulation and Competency Psychiatric
Annals, 35 (5), 424-430. 12 Jennings, A.,
(2004). Trauma informed mental health service
systems Blueprint for action. Alexandria, VA
National Association of State Mental Health
Program Directors, National Technical Assistance
Center for State Mental Health Planning. 13
Wilcox, P. (2008). The Restorative Approach.
Children's Voice,17 (3). Washington, CWLA.
15
Caregivers are taught 12 Coercives to avoid
16
Connect
17
Protect (Safety)
  • Environmental, emotional psychological
  • Clear boundaries expectations
  • Avoidance of re-enactment retraumatization
  • Includes ongoing evaluation of safety concerns
  • Frequent de-briefing of critical incidents
  • Attends to safety of youth, families staff

18
Protect
19
Respect (Choice Collaboration)
  • Promotes safety well-being
  • Teaches pro-social skills problem-solving
  • Empowers youth and families
  • Helps to identify coping strategies incentives
    more likely to be effective
  • Is person-centered
  • Flattens the hierarchy of coercion control14

14McCorkle, D. and Peacock, C. (2005) Trauma and
the isms-A herd of elephants in the room A
Training Vignette. Therapeutic Community The
International Journal for Therapeutic and
Supportive Organizations 26 (1) 127-133.
20
Respect
21
Teach, Reinforce, Redirect
  • Psycho-education about trauma for consumers,
    families staff
  • Developmentally suited curricula
  • Ongoing practice, coaching reinforcement
  • Opportunities to demonstrate skills leadership
  • Progress based on skill attainment rather than
    earned points or levels.

22
Teach
23
Reinforce
24
Case examples
  • A child in foster care is stealing food from the
    kitchen and hiding it under her bed. Her foster
    parents are quite upset because the food is
    rotting.

25
Case examples
  • An adoptive parent calls because her child
    refuses to take a shower or keep himself clean
    and presentable.

26
Questions?
  • Vicki Hummer vhummer_at_fmhi.usf.edu
  • Kim Crosland - kcrosland_at_fmhi.usf.edu
  • Norín Dollard dollard_at_fmhi.usf.edu

27
References
  • Abram, K.M., Teplin, L.A., Charles, D.R.,
    Longworth, S., McClelland, G., Duncan, M.
    (2004). Posttraumatic stress disorder and trauma
    in youth in juvenile detention. Archives of
    General Psychiatry, 61, 403-410.
  • Anda, R.F., Felitti, V.J., Bremner, J.D., Walker,
    J.D., Whitfield, C., Perry, B.D., Dube, S.R.,
    Giles, W.H. (2006). The enduring effects of
    abuse and related adverse experiences in
    childhood A convergence of evidence from
    neurobiology and epidemiology. European Archives
    of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 256,
    174-186.
  • Delaney-Black, V. Covington, C., Ondersma, S.J.,
    Nordstrom-Klee, B., Templin, T., Ager, J. et al
    (2002). Violence exposure, trauma, and IQ and/or
    reading deficits among urban children. Archives
    of Pediatrics Adolescent Medicine. 156 (3),
    280-285.
  • Grogger, J. (1997). Local violence and
    educational attainment. Journal of Human
    Resources, 32, 659-82.
  • Hurt, H., Malmud, E., Brodsky, N.L., Gianetta,
    J. (2001). Exposure to violence Psychological
    and academic correlates in child witnesses.
    Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine,
    155, 1351-1356.
  • Kessler, R.C., Sonnega, A., Bromet, E., Hughes,
    M., Nelson, C.B. (1995). Posttraumatic stress
    disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey.
    Archives of General Psychiatry, 52, 1048-1060.
  • Landsverk, Burns, Stambaugh, Rolls Reutz
    (2009). Psychosocial Interventions for Children
    and Adolescents in Foster Care Review of
    Research Literature. Child Welfare, 88(1), 49-69.
  • Wolpaw, J.W., Ford, J.D. (2004). Assessing
    exposure to psychological trauma and
    posttraumatic stress in the juvenile justice
    population. National Child Traumatic Stress
    Network.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com