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Treatment is Prevention: An Argument for Trauma-Informed Mental Health Treatment

By Andrea Blanch, Ph.D. and David Shern, Ph.D.

 

It is becoming increasingly clear that toxic stress and trauma play an important role in the development of mental health and addictive disorders. We have recently explored some of the implications of this emerging picture for improving individual treatmentIn this blog, we suggest that using effective trauma-informed treatments and family supports for adults will also help to prevent problems in their children’s development.

 

We know that having a parent diagnosed with a mental illness or addictive disorder puts children at risk for developing cognitive, emotional and behavioral problems. In fact, parental mental illness and addiction are two categories of adverse childhood events measured in the groundbreaking ACE Study. Exposure to parents with these conditions increases the risk that children will develop similar problems when they grow up. However, in our field’s efforts to legitimize mental and addictive disorders as treatable medical conditions, we have under-emphasized the effects of experience and under-resourced environmental interventions. In addition, stereotypes about people with serious behavioral health disorders led the field to largely overlook their roles as parents. While excellent family support programs now exist, they are not uniformly available. As a result, many parents with behavioral health issues and their children are not getting essential supports.

 

Parents with behavioral health disorders are not a small or insignificant group. Two-thirds of American adults who are diagnosed with a mental illness are parents, including adults with serious mental illnesses. One in four children is exposed to a family member’s alcohol abuse or dependence, and one in six lives with parents who have used illicit drugs in the past year. Clearly, providing prevention and treatment services to children along with parents entering treatment for their own problems would address a very common risk factor. 

 

Understanding intergenerational patterns of substance abuse, mental health and trauma gives us new ways of thinking of parental treatment as prevention. If we can help parents to understand and address the traumatic experiences that often contribute to their problems, they are less likely to act in ways that could unintentionally traumatize their children. If we can teach them about building resilience, they will be more likely to have children that thrive. As one woman in substance abuse treatment told us: “Now that I understand my trauma, I have a reason to stay in recovery. My goal is for my children’s ACE score to be lower than my own.”

 

Research has demonstrated that this approach works. The five-year SAMHSA-funded Women Co-Occurring Disorders and Violence Study showed that women with substance abuse and mental health disorders along with histories of violence did significantly better if: 1) they received gender-specific group treatment, 2) they had a voice in their services, and 3) if all three of their conditions were addressed simultaneously. For those with children, an additional focus on child resilience-building significantly improved child outcomes. Since the conclusion of this study, several of the study treatment models have been extensively evaluated and shown to be effective.

 

Addressing the trauma histories that so often accompany serious mental illnesses and addiction will not only result in better outcomes for parents, but will increase the likelihood that their children will live healthy, productive lives. Evidence-based programs should be available for all parents diagnosed with serious mental illnesses and addictions. For those with children at home, it should be standard practice to provide parental supports and child resilience-building interventions. These practices could make a huge difference in the lives of both parents and children.

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Dear Tina Marie,

So nice to 'meet' you. I'm an OB/GYN working part-time as a laborist at a few hospitals in Washington, DC and part-time as faculty in the Department of Bioethics at the NIH. I'd love to talk to you more about the possibility of using the ACE questionnaire in obstetrics, and I'm very interested in how we can frame the inquiry in prenatal care so that women understand the relevance and feel as safe as possible when deciding whether to disclose parts of their trauma history. Please let me know if you have any availability to chat by phone sometime over the next few weeks.

Regards,
Amina




Amina White, M.D., M.A.

National Institutes of Health

Department of Bioethics

10 Center Drive, Bldg 10, Room 1C118

Bethesda, MD 20892-1156

(Ph) 301-496-2429, (fax) 301-496-0760

Email: amina.white@nih.gov<mailto:amina.white@nih.gov>
Hi again Tina Marie,

Fantastic work you are doing! By way of this email, let me introduce
Amina White, an OB/GYN doc who is also doing some great work with trauma and
trauma-informed approaches. You two amazing women should definitely know
each other.

Best

Andy


In a message dated 3/20/2015 9:16:40 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
communitymanager@acesconnection.com writes:

Hi Andrea, See my answer on this blog Jane wrote up. It will give you an idea of how I screen for ACEs. I want to get the OB department to screen pregnant mom's for ACEs so we can refer early.  After Dr. Felitti was here a couple weeks ago, one of the OB's interested. I would also like to incorporate ACEs screening into selected pediatric infant well visits. I did the SEEK program (safe environment for every kid) from Howard Dubowitz at the University of Maryland -- It won the Ray Helfer award in 2013 or 14. Using Dr. Dubowitz's model -- ACEs screening in the pediatric office with infants would be really simple to implement

 

https://www.pacesconnection.com/...7#416759214743137707

 

SEEK  http://theinstitute.umaryland....nline_Train_Desc.cfm

 

And how have I been promoting the ideas, probably not very efficiently, but I brought Dr. Felitti to town.  We are going to publish an ACEs survey in a local advertiser called the star that reaches 25,000 people and link that to a survey monkey to reach even more people. I am hoping that getting an informal idea of our areas ACEs which I know are high as our health statistics rank only better than Flint and Detroit (infant mortality also) that this may also spark more interest.  We have also formed an ACEs steering committee and I have been giving presentation after presentation on ACEs, Toxic Stress, Epigenetics and Neurodevelopment.  The OB was interested in incorporating Dr. Felitti's North American Health Index into the EHR.   I am gonna push for that as long as I stay here.   It is an uphill battle.  That I have to admit.  And if you aren't good at it, it does take time (but knowing the community resources and the science of aces in and out and scheduling frequent followup really helps alleviate those issues)...... 

Last edited by Former Member
You are so right about the funding issue! We are hoping to develop a
coalition of advocates that includes both treatment people and preventionists so
that both sides of the coin are held up as necessary and important. We
also hope to encourage public policymakers to bring the two fields together
in a public health approach. Keep us posted if you have any further
thoughts or suggestions.

Best

Andy


In a message dated 3/16/2015 6:59:02 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
communitymanager@acesconnection.com writes:

Hi Grace,

     Our NH Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, got a grant from the NH Endowment for Health, to do a two year study to ascertain the Mental Health Needs of NH's Children who witness or experience sexual or domestic violence. At the conclusion of their study they published their report. I don't yet know the status of whether the report was received by our state Behavioral Health Advisory Committee, and whether it is included in our state Mental Health Plan. If any of my fellow NH ACEsConnection members know, I hope they'll submit a comment to that effect [Thanks in advance, to any who comment].

Thank you for this post - it is so hard to get mental health providers to think about children in the home.  There has to be a comprehensive approach for these families.  The second part of this is that funding often swings back and forth between prevention and intervention and both have to be offered at the same time in order for us to make inroads in these problems.

Thanks so much Tina Marie! I couldn't agree with you more. I assume from
your photo and your response that you are a pediatrician? Where are you
located. I'd love to learn more about how you are promoting these ideas to
your colleagues. Warm regards, Andy


In a message dated 3/13/2015 8:27:06 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
communitymanager@acesconnection.com writes:

You have the best postings.  It is so critical that mental health and pediatrics grasps the importance of providing trauma informed care to parents and resilience building practices to children.  

 

I just talked to my mother today (produced 5 kids with ACE scores between 6-9).  She is rather distraught that she unintentionally seriously damaged all 5 of her children's mental health and she tells me how she wishes so badly that someone had let her know that what she was doing was seriously damaging all of her children.  She is truly sorry and I believe with all my heart our patients, parents and the children we care for deserve this information.  Many lives would be saved and much human suffering could be averted.  

 

Thanks for the really important posts. 

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