Skip to main content

Hello all,

I am preparing to make the ACE questionnaire a part of our standard intake procedures here at the HIV clinic where I work. We provide individual psychotherapy for our patients, and we are a trauma informed program. I would appreciate any thoughts/suggestions on how to best administer this. For example, what is the best way to frame the reasoning for asking these questions for patients? Are there special considerations for addressing sensitive topics early in the relationship? Also, I am considering administering the resilience questionnaire as well. Any thoughts on this would be appreciated as well.

 

Thanks to all,

Keith Haas, LCSW

Director of Behavioral

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Hello Keith,

i have much to share in this topic.  Could we have a call?  Maybe others would like to join as well.  You raise all the right questions.  One thing is to think of this as an assessment to open a healing and health promotion dialogue vs screening.  The frame is one of empowerment and self care and development- much more!  Christy 

Last edited by Jane Stevens

We can use the chat function on ACEsConnection. It's a little different than audio conversation....there's a moderator, and it's a great way to package a lot of information into a short time. People type in their questions, the host answers, but so does everyone else, if they have information to contribute. It's archived in a way that you can quickly scroll through the text to retrieve useful information. And it's great way for two people to connect with each other without interrupting the flow of the conversation.

What do you think?

Hi all,

RegroupTherapy is a free, encrypted platform. (I use it for teletherapy sessions.) It's easy to sign up and, unlike Skype, is private and protected. I have it and could facilitate a call Friday morning sometime between 11 and 1 PST, if you would like. I would need your emails and names. You would get an email with instructions to download a simple plug-in and a code to sign in to the call. I use the ACE questionnaire frequently when working with a variety of clients in private practice. Please feel free to email me at cathyharris@traumainformedpro.com if this sounds good to you.

http://www.regrouptherapy.com

I'm going to lobby again for having this chat on ACEsConnection, so that we can alert other members who aren't going to be able to join but want to, so that they can benefit from the information provided by those that participate.

A reminder: since the chat will take place in the Taking an ACE History group, the content would be available only to people who are members of ACEsConnection.

Sounds good, Thomas. I expect that this will be pretty popular, as our one about trauma-informed schools was. So having 20-30 people in a text chat might be more manageable than 20 people in a video chat or a conference call. I expect that we'll have quite a few ideas to follow up on, and some of those may be smaller, which lend themselves to better participation in a video chat.

Ack. I'm booked tomorrow. Can we do this next week so that we can let a few more people know about it? I can announce it in the Monday's daily digest. If that works, are you available on Tuesday at 9 am PT or 2 pm PT, or Wednesday 9 am PT, or Thursday 9 am PT, 10 am PT, or 1:30 pm PT?

I'll want to connect prior to show you how the chat works, too, so that it goes smoothly. It's easy.

I coordinate a jail based substance abuse program and we use ACE for both our substance use disorder program and our trauma, addiction and mental health program.   We use the ACE in the individual assessment for people entering our SUD program and in a group orientation for our TAMAR Project.

We discuss the research finding with the group as a whole, without asking individual members to disclose their score. Very useful tool in looking at who may need a more in-depth assessment for trauma.  Individuals are surprised to see some of the correlations between behavioral health issues and their scores- in a way, normalizing (not the best word) their reactions/behaviors.   

Great way to get the conversation started as well. 

Last edited by David A Washington

Very interested in participating. Amy Bryant and I have developed a flyer we are distributing to local pediatricians that offers a resiliency questionnaire and also offers a free online webinar, free closed parenting Facebook groups, and an online parenting class that they may want to sign up for. The idea is to help prevent ACEs by teaching parents about their own resiliency and how to parent using co-regulation which helps regulate both the parent and child.

Many parents' lives are too hectic to find a sitter and drive somewhere once a week, so we are offering it online. I'm attaching our flyers.

Attachments

Hi guys,

I'm planning on participating, but I'm a bit confused about the time slot.

We could perhaps do a Doodle (http://doodle.com/) to help us coordinate more explicitly?

Also, as you probably know by now from my posts, I am working on online open source, privacy-first ACE screening and reporting tools (delivered through smartphones, apps, PCs, websites (also embedded) and on paper), and I should be able to demonstrate a prototype next week as well.

I don't want to hijack the agenda for this particular meeting, but one of the most important factors to me in being able to deliver value to the ACE community with my project is that it addresses the actual needs and supports the real-life processes that you guys engage in with your clients, users, students, etc. It's also a huge personal motivation to me.

If you would like it, I could do a short live demo via a YouTube stream, and engage with the community via the ACEsConnection chat either during the meeting or at some other time next week?

Best,
Thomas

Robbyn Peters Bennett posted:

Very interested in participating. Amy Bryant and I have developed a flyer we are distributing to local pediatricians that offers a resiliency questionnaire and also offers a free online webinar, free closed parenting Facebook groups, and an online parenting class that they may want to sign up for. The idea is to help prevent ACEs by teaching parents about their own resiliency and how to parent using co-regulation which helps regulate both the parent and child.

Many parents' lives are too hectic to find a sitter and drive somewhere once a week, so we are offering it online. I'm attaching our flyers.

thanks for sharing the flier!

We're going with a chat on ACEsConnection first, Keith. And we'll continue doing chats about this as long as people are interested, probably featuring people from different types of organizations that are implementing taking ACEs history, and in some cases, using it as a screening tool. Stay tuned for day/time....I hope to figure that out today. It'll be no sooner than next Thursday.

This is very exciting and I would love to be part of the chat - this is also a topic of great interest among the MARC communities and others.  I just participated in a webinar conducted by a FQHC (Community Based Health Center) in Colorado that has integrated ACE screening into their process.  I am still interested in creating a directory on ACEs Connection of everyone who is using the ACE questionnaire - or a modified version of it - in practice.

Hello Christy,  As my organization does not use the tool I ask the questions but put them in to the three catetories physical, mental, and Family dysfunction. Ad B. Vander Kolk points out in his book, may people in dysfunctional families don't realize they are. One of the SW I works with argues that the question should be asking people if there were any experiences they Perceived as traumatic, the emphesis being on the perception of the patient. That however would mean that the patient consciously recognized it and many times they do not.

 

I agree that it is trauma perceived that engages the bodies reaction and chronic stress.  As such, I have wondered about using a consequences-based vs event based assessment.  Yet, seems the ACEs items cover the range of likely sources of more extreme trauma.  For me, the unique aspect is trauma associated with loss of safety and nurturing from primary caregivers and those we needed to trust, etc.  much to discuss

I've also heard people, when educated about ACEs, say that they didn't understand that being verbally abused or experiencing neglect or divorce, or living with an alcoholic parent, could do damage. They just thought they themselves were "bad" people (or even bad children or born bad) and it took that education about ACEs to open the door for them. If people experience neglect, for example, as normal, then often they think they're responsible for the  consequences of neglect. Over and over, people when hearing about ACEs, say: "This explains my life." i.e.....if you don't know what safety feels like, then "loss of safety" feels normal.

Keith Haas posted:

Hello all,

Also, I am considering administering the resilience questionnaire as well. Any thoughts on this would be appreciated as well.

 

 

Keith,

What resilience questionnaire are you talking about? I'm interested in the topic and have some reservations about it, as well. One of them is the limitations in the field of instruments to measure resilience. To wit: 

concepthttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3042897/ 

Best of luck with the call, I won't be able to attend but look forward to the "proceedings" on such important issue.

Andres

Hello Mem,  Yes, I would definately use it. To me the is no point digging up problems if you can't help supply solutions. Resiliency history helps you identify this and direct patients to resources. I just found out about this place yesterday and have sent an inquiry asking directory of practitioners with these unique skills that I can refer patients to. http://www.lisaferentz.com/workshops/     Based on the recent seminar I went to taught by Dr. B. Vander Kolk I have a new preference for referring people to those practitioners who use therapies that appeal to the visceral senses rather than just talk therapy. 

 

Diane Iverson posted:

Hello Mem,  Yes, I would definately use it. To me the is no point digging up problems if you can't help supply solutions. 

 

Dear Diane,

From a provider-centered perspective, I understand your point. None of us likes to feel helpless. From a client- or patient-centered perspective, however, research shows that clients want their providers to ask about exposure to traumatic experiences and respond with empathy to their disclosure.  For clients, disclosure in the context of empathy can be therapeutic in itself. In addition, the disclosure and the response they receive may deepen the trust and feelings of safety with their provider. In order to bring about behavioral change towards recovery and reduce health risks, mental and physical healthcare relationships require that foundation of trust and safety. There's a beautiful piece on a recent issue of JAMA, "Responding To Suffering" by Ron Epstein and Anthony Back that I think conveys this point.

Best,

Andres

PS: The article is attached, but please do not post it in the public domain, as I believe it would be an infringement of copyright. 

Attachments

Add Reply

Copyright ÂĐ 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×