Fr. 55.50

Developing Trauma Informed Services for Psychosis - A Multidisciplinary Journey Towards Healing

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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A multidisciplinary group of clinicians explore the connections between traumatic experiences and psychosis, charting the development of a series of interventions designed for both inpatients and outpatients over the course of two decades.
Developing Trauma Informed Services for Psychosis details how clinicians developed a trauma committee in a public mental health facility and implemented trauma informed policies and practices, including assessments and multimodal treatment options. Chapters outline trauma informed approaches that include individual, group, and family modalities. Emphasis is on core aspects of programming such as building safety, establishing trusting relationships, and empowerment. One survivor's descriptive account as well as service users' and therapists' experiences are brought to life through personal narratives and fictionalised vignettes. This volume advocates for a multidisciplinary approach that fosters the development of unique treatment paradigms and leads to a dynamic interplay between verbal and creative arts therapies.
This book will be of interest to clinicians, administrators, students, caregivers, and anyone interested in the intersection between therapy and the arts.

List of contents

Introduction  Part 1: Foundations of a Trauma Focused Approach in a Psychiatric Facility  1. the Relationship between Trauma and Psychosis: Historical Background and Theoretical Issues  2. Life Experience Behind and Beside Symptoms  3. Discovering Trauma Histories in People with Psychosis Leads to Political Action  4. Implementing Hospital-wide Trauma Assessments  5. Formation and Development of the Trauma Committee  6. Widening the Circle of Care: Trauma Programme for Staff  Part 2: Trauma Focused Interventions: From Fragmentation to Integration  7. Exploring a Group Therapy Approach for Healing from Complex Trauma  8. Implemeting a Trauma Informed Approach on an Inpatient Unit  9. Trauma Informed Care in Outpatient Clinics  10. Family Therapy Model for Treating Trauma in People with Serious Mental Illness  11. Towards an LGBTQI+ Affirmative and Trauma Informed Approach in People with Psychosis  Part 3: Trauma Focused Interventions: Collaboration with Creative Arts Therapies Opens Up New Doors in Trauma Treatment  12. Music Therapy: Exploring a Structured Trauma Informed Group Therapy Model  13. Interweaving Words and Music in Music-Verbal Therapy Trauma Groups  14. Developing Structured Art Therapy Groups to Treat Complex Trauma  15. Folding and Unfolding: Expanding Trauma Focused Art Therapy  16. Trauma Informed Dance/Movement Therapy: Embodied Moving and Dancing  Conclusion

Summary

A multidisciplinary group of clinicians explore the connections between traumatic experiences and psychosis, charting the development of a series of interventions designed for both inpatients and outpatients over the course of two decades.

Report

'Admission to a psychiatric unit is a terrifying and demoralizing experience for people who feel that they are already standing on a precipice from which there is no return. That is why this is such an important book. The kind of facility being described here holds the possibility of helping people whose lives have been desperately hurt not to jump off that precipice but instead to make life-affirming decisions focused on healing and recovery. For me, this book is about passing the baton to a new generation of people who care about some of the most vulnerable in our culture.'
Sandra L. Bloom, M.D., author, Creating Sanctuary: Toward the Evolution of Sane Societies, www.creatingpresence.net
'What an important and timely book this is - the first to describe a comprehensive attempt to institute a trauma-informed approach to psychosis on an inpatient unit. It is fascinating to read about the multi-year journey of dedicated clinicians and researchers - and their patients - confronting and overcoming obstacles and learning much personally and professionally in the process - including the crucial importance of the creative art therapies to healing from trauma and psychosis. This pioneering book will provide a blueprint worth its weight in gold for anyone hoping to develop a trauma-informed psychosis unit. May this success story encourage many to try!'
Andrew Moskowitz, Ph.D., lead editor of Psychosis, Trauma and Dissociation (Wiley, 2008, 2019) and Associate Professor of Psychology at the George Washington University in Washington, DC
'Workers in public psychiatric settings can find it hard to keep their eyes on the prize of humane, healing treatment, plowed under as they are by funding concerns and ever-increasing regulations and documentation. In this inspiring book, a multi-disciplinary team documents their efforts over the years to transform psychiatric care through a deep understanding of the effects of trauma in the lives of people with serious mental illness. Chapters detail from multiple perspectives how this attention to trauma results in a safer, healthier environment for staff, who can in turn provide compassion and healing for the people in their care. Interestingly, creative arts therapies are a crucial part of the solution, and all staff are considered. The psychiatric system is much in need of this hopeful message, and detailed map of the way forward.'
Julie Kipp, PhD., LCSW, President of the Executive Committee of the International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis (ISPS)
'This is a significant book that supports the connection between trauma and psychosis while illuminating the healing process that is possible within a multicultural, multidisciplinary team approach. Of note is the authors' elucidation of the effectiveness of creative arts therapies in transforming feelings of isolation into an experience of belonging.'
Diane Austin, D.A., LCAT, author of "The Wounded Healer" in Music, Music Therapy and Trauma: International Perspectives by Julie P. Sutton (2002)
'I am so excited that you all wrote about psychosis and healing! What a legend team. I haven't stopped talking about you and the committee's work and support.'
Rebecca Zarate, PhD., MT-BC, LCAT, author of Music Psychotherapy and Anxiety: Social, Community, and Clinical Contexts (2022) and former trainee and member of the Trauma Committee
'In this fascinating book, the authors share the treasure of their extensive experience in developing trauma-informed services for patients diagnosed with psychosis. They provide the reader with a wealth of hands-on experiences, ranging from the gradual establishment of trauma-informed structures and changes in institutional policy to innovative therapeutic approaches for different settings. One of the book's greatest strengths is the strong focus on service-users' perspectives. It consistently includes the viewpoint of survivors learning from their experiences in a system that has ignored their needs for far too long. A book full of valuable advice that will literally be a textbook for a new generation of trauma-informed services.'
Ingo Schäfer, MD, MPH, Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Hamburg, Germany

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