a trauma-informed children’s intervention norma finkelstein, phd executive director, institute for...
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A Trauma-Informed A Trauma-Informed Children’s InterventionChildren’s Intervention
Norma Finkelstein, PhDNorma Finkelstein, PhDExecutive Director, Institute for Health and Recovery
Lisa Russell, Ph.D.Senior Scientist, ETR Associates
Sixth Annual Conference on Co-Occurring Disorders: Sixth Annual Conference on Co-Occurring Disorders:
One Person, One Team, One Plan for Recovery One Person, One Team, One Plan for Recovery
February 8, 2008February 8, 2008
Long Beach, CALong Beach, CA
Possible Impact of Family Possible Impact of Family Substance Abuse/Mental Illness and Substance Abuse/Mental Illness and
Violence on ChildrenViolence on Children
• Sleep disturbances – nightmares, trouble waking up, trouble falling asleep
• Aggressive behavior and angry feelings
• A very high activity level
• Constant worry about possible danger
• Forgetting how to do things they have mastered
Child Witness to Violence Project, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA
Children Need:Children Need:
• Safety• Developmentally appropriate information
about addiction and recovery• To express their feelings about their
experiences in a safe place• Emotional skill-building• Time to re-establish trust in the parent-child
relationship
Protective Factors to Increase Protective Factors to Increase Resiliency in ChildrenResiliency in Children
• Caring Relationships
Safety, basic trust, listening
• High Expectation Messages
Guidance, structure, challenge
• Opportunities for Meaningful Contributions
Making decisions, giving voice, being heard
WCDVS Children’s Subset Study WCDVS Children’s Subset Study Primary GoalsPrimary Goals
• Generate empirical knowledge about the effectiveness of trauma-informed, age-specific intervention models
• Identify models of care that will prevent or reduce intergenerational perpetuation of violence
For children of mothers with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders & histories of violence:
Target PopulationTarget Population
• Children (aged five to ten years) of women enrolled in the Women, Co-Occurring Disorders and Violence Study
• Woman must be caregiver to child (not necessarily primary)
• Must have at least weekly contact with child (can be in person or via telephone)
• Siblings can participate in a group, but only one child can be in study (most accessible or by birth date closest to program entry date)
SAMHSA Women Co-occurring Disorders & SAMHSA Women Co-occurring Disorders & Violence: Children’s Sub-StudyViolence: Children’s Sub-Study
Four sites: Cross site study with common protocol
Each site has:• 30 Intervention• 30 Comparison
Dates:• October 2000 – September 2003
WCDVS Children’s Study SitesWCDVS Children’s Study Sites
Allies Project
Prototypes
New Directions for Families
W.E.L.L. Project
Intervention DevelopmentIntervention Development
• Interventions developed through national steering committee process
• Active participation on steering committee of Consumer/Survivor/Recovering (CSR) women
• Critical involvement of CSR in design and evaluation
• CSR letter to participants– Concerns regarding: child abuse reporting, trust
• Use of CSR advocates, group leaders, resource coordinators
Intervention DevelopmentIntervention Development
The Children’s Study Was Guided by the The Children’s Study Was Guided by the Following Core Values Children Are Entitled Following Core Values Children Are Entitled
To:To:1. Having their voices
heard
2. Being physically safe
3. Experiencing consistency
4. Having a sense of dignity & self-worth
5. Having control over their bodies
6. Receiving respect, understanding, compassion, & support
7. Having nurturing relationships with adults in their lives
8. Having confidentiality respected, except when issues of safety arise
9. Connecting to community & natural supports
Core InterventionsCore Interventions
• Screening / Assessment
• Service Coordination / Advocacy
• Skill building / Resiliency promoting group– Includes safety planning
Clinical AssessmentClinical Assessment
• Strengths and interests• Significant life events• Parent and child
substance abuse• Medical concerns
• Mental health needs • Educational and
developmental issues• Parenting and discipline
Resource Coordination and Resource Coordination and AdvocacyAdvocacy
• Parent and child self-determination and empowerment
• Strengths-focused rather than pathology-focused
• Resource coordinators as “resiliency mentors”
• Focused on resiliency-building activities
• Teaching parents advocacy skills
Primary Goals of the Group Primary Goals of the Group InterventionIntervention
• Learn self-protection skills
• Develop skill in self-soothing
• Enhance interpersonal relationships
• Strengthen self-esteem and self identity
• Groups divided into four separate age groups: 5-7 and 8-10
• Individual assessment with mother and child separately prior to child joining group
• Groups required co-leadership
Children’s Group InterventionChildren’s Group Intervention
Week 1: Getting to know each other / message: it’s ok to feel and express feelings*
Week 2: What is abuse?Week 3: AngerWeek 4: It’s not always happy at my houseWeek 5: Sharing personal experience with
violence
*Adopted from Groupwork with Children of Battered Women, Peled & Davis, Sage Publications, 1995.
Orientation – with mothers and children
Children’s Group InterventionChildren’s Group Intervention
Week 6: Touch
Week 7: Assertiveness
Week 8: Protective Planning
Week 9: Review and good-bye
Booster Session (1): 30 days post – review week 2 (abuse)
Booster Session (2): 60 days post – review week 8 (safety planning)
Children’s Group InterventionChildren’s Group Intervention
• Message of the week– Example: “Abuse and violence are not okay”
• Check-in• Feeling of the day
– Example: “Sad”• Activities and process• Personal affirmation• Pass the squeeze• Snack• Reward / reinforcement
Characteristics of ChildrenCharacteristics of Children
• Average age – 7.28 years• In legal custody of mother – 74.3% • Involved in child welfare system – 39% • Experiencing emotional or behavioral problems –
67.5 % • Parent convicted of a crime – 79.8%• Parent treated for substance abuse – 98%
National Trauma Consortium.
Evidence of ImpactEvidence of Impact
Primary research question of
the Children’s Study:
Are trauma-informed, age-specific interventions for
children more effective than usual care conditions in leading to increases in safety, self-care, positive interpersonal relationships and self-identity?
Study SampleStudy Sample
• N=253 at Baseline
• N=209 at 6 months (82.6%)
• N=217 at 12 months (85.8% retention)
• N=195 (77.1%) received Baseline, 6 month and 12 month interviews
• Intervention and comparison groups are statistically equivalent on demographic characteristics across follow-ups
Age (N = 253)Age (N = 253)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Aged 5 - 7 Aged 8 - 10
Intervention Group(n=115)
Comparison Group(n=138)
Prevalence of VictimizationPrevalence of Victimization
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Sexual Abuse PhysicalAbuse
DomesticViolence
Intervention Group(n=115)
Comparison Group(n=138)
Short Term EffectsShort Term Effects (6 months past baseline)(6 months past baseline)
• Mother’s positive change (improvement) in symptomatology strongest predictor of child’s positive change in emotional and behavioral strengths & competencies
• Children whose mothers had positive outcomes did well regardless of treatment assignment
• Children in intervention group showed general improvement regardless of mother’s 6-month outcomes
Short Term EffectsShort Term Effects (6 months past baseline)(6 months past baseline)
• At 6 months, while involvement in standardized intervention did not predict children’s overall improved short-term outcomes, it did lead to significant improvement in specific domains of positive interpersonal relationships, positive self-identity, and increases in safety knowledge
Longer-Term EffectsLonger-Term Effects(12 Months past baseline)(12 Months past baseline)
• Mother’s outcomes no longer played significant role in predicting children’s positive outcomes
• Involvement in intervention was significant predictor of children’s positive change in emotional & behavioral strengths, regardless of mother’s outcomes
Longer-Term EffectsLonger-Term Effects(12 Months past baseline)(12 Months past baseline)
• Younger children showed more improvement regardless of condition
• Children in intervention group performed consistently better across all age groups
• Substance abuse/mental health programs have a unique opportunity to intervene to address inter-generational impact of violence/trauma
• Any setting where parents receive substance abuse and/or mental health services should be capable of providing, at the very least, screening and referral services for children
ImplicationsImplications
• For these children, early intervention services can reduce the possibility of more serious childhood and adult disorders
• Children’s study showed treating parents had clear benefits for children, but may not be enough in itself
• Specific services to children provide additional benefits
ImplicationsImplications
Lessons LearnedLessons Learned
• Children can be the motivator for women to seek treatment
• Treatment of the woman offers an opportunity to provide services to the children
• Traumatic childhood experiences influence the ability to parent
• Victimization of children triggers memories in the parent
• Motherhood is both a major source of identity and self-worth, and a source of shame and guilt
Lessons LearnedLessons Learned
• Extreme guilt and shame must be addressed in order to build healthy parenting relationships
• The support of a parent who has experienced similar challenges is critical to overcoming fear and guilt
• Must have well developed working relationships with child welfare agencies
• System related issues of confidentiality and privacy must be addressed in order to promote healthy boundaries
WELL ChildWELL Child
“I learned how to have fun with my children. I learned how to, you know – children love to play outside, alright? I didn’t like to go outside. I learned to play kickball, ride bikes, take a walk. [The WELL Child Clinician] would walk with us. In the beginning I wouldn’t have done that it if [the WELL Child Clinician] wasn’t doing it.”
“Through the WELL Project, I was able to get connected with [the WELL Child Clinician] who in turn was able to help me with [my child]…The purpose of your program is to help women that use and maybe have had children under a certain age and [my child] fell in that category so it made me be more aware of the damage that I may have caused [my child]. Like I said, by me getting hooked up with [the WELL Child Clinician], she was able to do some things with me that I guess otherwise I would have just not worried about. Or some gifts in [my child] that I would have ordinarily not seen, you know, had I not been connected with this program and somebody showing interest to my child.”
WELL ChildWELL Child
“You know, [the WELL Child Clinician] was a god-send. She really was. She spent a lot of time, talking with me, and I would watch her interact with my children, and play basketball and play soccer and she let me come into it slowly, you know? They never made me say anything or do anything I didn’t want to do. I got a lot of support from [the WELL Integrated Care Facilitator (ICF)]. She used to meet with me, I think it was every week , and we would talk and see where the kids were at. I went through a lot of things in that house [substance abuse residential]. As of today, my children and I have such a bond. It’s like when I said I didn’t want to parent, it took me, with the help of other people but today that’s untouchable. They’ve learned to trust again, you know? And that, again, meeting with [the WELL Child Clinician], and knowing [the WELL Child Clinician] going to show up at the same time every week or whatever she did, it built consistency in their life. And they learned to trust. I think [my child] trusted [WELL Child Clinician] before [my child] really trusted me.”
How was the children’s intervention different How was the children’s intervention different from what women in treatment historically from what women in treatment historically
experienced?experienced?
Within substance abuse treatment, focus on children was historically related to accessing:
• Child care
• Residential treatment for mothers
• Some referral for existing outside services
• As more programs began including children of all ages, became clear how many services were needed
• Programs have embraced treatment for women andand children but most have not designed clinical and milieu interventions for the children
• Underlying assumption has been that a mother’s recovery will positively impact her children (and will be enough)
• Needs of children have not been addressed independently of the parent-child relationship (e.g., parenting classes)
A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential Treatment with ChildrenTreatment with Children
• “Children weren’t making it there because there’s nothing for those [older] children to do. They were so isolated, and they couldn’t do anything. I mean it was like the children were being punished also for what their parents were doing. It was bad enough that they were having to live the lifestyle they were living with their parents, but now their parents are in recovery it was like they were still being punished.”
A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential Treatment with ChildrenTreatment with Children
• “You come in and a counselor assesses you and your needs and your problems, but there’s nobody to assess the children and their needs and their problems. These kids have a lot of needs and a lot of problems because they’ve lived in this lifestyle for a long time. They don’t do that. They don’t have anybody assess the children and see what’s going on with them until they see them trying to jump off the balconies and biting kids…”
A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential Treatment with ChildrenTreatment with Children
• “One thing I think they need to do is hire more staff…have someone there who is a behavioral psychologist or something similar, just for children.”
The Children’s InterventionThe Children’s Interventionand Systems Changeand Systems Change
What did we learn about the process of integrating the children’s intervention in adult substance abuse treatment settings?
Incorporating Children’s Services: Incorporating Children’s Services: Key Elements of a Paradigm ShiftKey Elements of a Paradigm Shift
Family-centered
Trauma-informedPrevention & Early Intervention
Incorporating Children’s Services: Incorporating Children’s Services: Cross-Cutting DimensionsCross-Cutting Dimensions
• Philosophy and goals
• Primary clients
• Staff skills and roles
• Interventions
• Administrative and systems issues
Family-Centered: Family-Centered: Philosophy and GoalsPhilosophy and Goals
• Relationships are central to recovery
• Parent and child well-being are intertwined, whether they live together or apart
• Treatment is to promote well-being of entire family
Family-Centered: Primary ClientFamily-Centered: Primary Client
• Family as client rather than single individual as client
• Each family member is a primary client, e.g., children are not solely collateral clients
Family-Centered: Staff Skills and RolesFamily-Centered: Staff Skills and Roles
• Skilled in working with children and mothers as family
• Acts as coach and mentor vs. distanced professional• Not aligned primarily with either mother or child• Recognizes legitimacy of child welfare concerns• Has vehicle to address own attitudes and biases about
recovery, parenting and related cultural issues• Acts as a positive role model
Family-Centered: InterventionsFamily-Centered: Interventions
• Are strengths-based and focus on resiliency building• Are aimed at relationship strengthening• Value families having meaningful voice and choice• Are inclusive, flexible, responsive, and culturally relevant• Are individualized based on screening and assessment for
physical/behavioral health/violence exposure in family • Include parenting, family counseling, partner/marital
counseling, children’s mental health services and substance abuse treatment
• Reflect multi-system collaboration with child services agencies – schools, health clinics/pediatricians, recreational programs, juvenile justice, child welfare, behavioral health, etc.
Family-Centered: Administrative and Family-Centered: Administrative and Systems IssuesSystems Issues
• Commitment to family-centered services approach• Policies, procedures, staffing, funding, and physical space that
support: – positive parent-child, inter-staff, & staff-family interactions,– developmentally appropriate and safe activities for children, – recruitment and retention of qualified staff– ongoing staff development and promotion– consistent, high quality clinical supervision
• Clear policies and training on child abuse reporting, confidentiality of records
• Funding streams that support direct child and family services and cross-system collaboration
Prevention: Philosophy and GoalsPrevention: Philosophy and Goals
• Strengths based• Treatment for parent is a preventive
intervention for the family • Value family preservation• Strengthen family functioning, nurturing
parenting practices• Build resiliency and protective factors to
prevent future substance abuse, mental illness, and violence
Prevention: Primary ClientPrevention: Primary Client
• Child: increase protective factors, decrease risk factors
• Parent: treatment, parenting skills
Prevention: Staff Skills and RolesPrevention: Staff Skills and Roles
• Emphasize resiliency building for child• Skills in strengths based approach, including
assessing protective and risk factors• Provide consistent, caring, positive role model to
child client• Knowledge of child development and resiliency
building• Experience accessing and linking community-based
children’s services• Skills in modeling and supporting positive parenting
Prevention: InterventionsPrevention: Interventions
• Assessment of risk and protective factors for child• Focus on developing child resilience: coping skills,
self-care, safety skills, constructive ways to express feelings, healthy relationships, help-seeking
• Advocate for child with community-based resources of interest (e.g., sports, music, art, drama)
• Guide and support parent’s ability to support child’s school work and to advocate for child at school
• Work with parents to reduce child’s exposure to risk factors
Prevention: Administrative and Systems Prevention: Administrative and Systems IssuesIssues
• Staff training on strengths based approaches, child resiliency, and child development
• Address organizational and staff barriers to prevention work with families
• Address tensions that may develop between parent/adult staff and children’s staff, if these are separate
• Develop funding mechanisms to cover early identification and intervention (e.g., SCHIP or Medicaid/EPSDT)
Trauma-Informed: Philosophy and GoalsTrauma-Informed: Philosophy and Goals
• Trauma is often central to recovery from substance abuse and mental disorders
• Parental/child trauma exposure puts children at risk for emotional, behavioral & interpersonal problems
• Coping skills learned to survive violence may be maladaptive in other contexts
• Many aspects of program environments and procedures can feel unsafe for survivors of violence & trigger distress
Trauma-Informed: Primary ClientTrauma-Informed: Primary Client
• Child as survivor and/or witness to violence or child of a survivor
• Parent as survivor and/or witness
Trauma-Informed: Staff Skills and RolesTrauma-Informed: Staff Skills and Roles
• Knowledge about how trauma impacts child development and family relationships and dynamics
• Skills in recognizing and addressing trauma in children of different ages and intergenerational trauma in families
• Have addressed own trauma recovery, if applicable• Are supportive and non-confrontational with parents• Able to recognize and change program procedures
that may be retraumatizing
Trauma-Specific: InterventionsTrauma-Specific: Interventions
• Assessment of child and parent exposure to violence and trauma-related symptoms
• Prevention/early intervention with child, aimed at defining violence, understanding the impact of trauma, non-violent ways of dealing with needs and conflicts, development of safety plans and healthy coping mechanisms
• Mental health services are selected and coordinated to reflect assessed strengths and needs of child and family
• Use of evidence-based cognitive behavioral approach
Trauma-Informed: Administrative and Trauma-Informed: Administrative and Systems IssuesSystems Issues
• Commitment to evidence-based trauma interventions and ongoing clinical support for them
• Training in confidentiality and CPS reporting issues
• Trauma-informed policies, procedures, and physical setting
• Expanded funding mechanisms for trauma specific services
SummarySummary
• Cannot simply add services for children into existing adult programs– Requires changes in both ideology and practice
• Paradigm shift needed: Towards trauma-informed, trauma-specific family treatment which includes resilience building and strengths based prevention and treatment services for children
““Do no harm” Do no harm” A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential A Woman’s Reflection on Her Residential
Treatment with ChildrenTreatment with Children
• “The treatment center I entered is for women and children, but I saw a lot of things while I was there that made me wonder, you know, whether they were really trying to help the children or what they were doing was in the best interest of the children.”
Contact InformationContact Information
Norma Finkelstein, PhDNorma Finkelstein, PhDExecutive DirectorInstitute for Health and Recovery349 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139(617) 661-3991, normafinkelstein@healthrecovery.org
Lisa Russell, Ph.D.Senior Scientist ETR Associates4 Carbonero WayScotts Valley, CA 95066(831) 438-4060, lisar@etr.org
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