Trauma-Informed Care in Child Welfare: An Imperative for Residential Childcare Workers

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2020

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Ce document est lié à :
International Journal of Child and Adolescent Resilience ; vol. 7 no. 1 (2020)

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Erudit

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All Rights Reserved ©, 2020Denise MichelleBrend, GinnySprang




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Denise Michelle Brend et al., « Trauma-Informed Care in Child Welfare: An Imperative for Residential Childcare Workers », International Journal of Child and Adolescent Resilience / Revue internationale de la résilience des enfants et des adolescents, ID : 10.7202/1072595ar


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Context: Rates of traumatization among residential child welfare professionals are alarmingly high. The well-being of these professionals is associated both with their intention to stay in their jobs and outcomes of children in their care. Several risk factors threaten the well-being of child welfare professionals, including primary and secondary exposure to experiences with the potential to provoke posttraumatic stress reactions.Objectives: This manuscript details experiences empirically shown to have potential negative impacts on professional well-being, discusses why these impacts are of particular concern for residential childcare workers, and describes the types of organizational cultures and climates that appear to mitigate these negative impacts.Implications: Trauma-informed care at the organizational level is proposed both as a means to reduce harm to child-welfare professionals and promote the rehabilitation of children within the child welfare system.

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