认识、认识、回应:医学创伤知情护理的建设

Lama Mouneimne
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摘要

2019年12月,西部大学为医学生举办了第一次关于创伤知情护理(TIC)的讲座。TIC是一种普遍的治疗框架,涉及到意识、识别和应对情绪创伤的影响。该模型将问题从“你怎么了?”到“你出什么事了?”这种方法上的改变直到最近才受到医疗专业人员的关注,也许是因为直到最近,创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)主要是在军事创伤的背景下理解的,而对平民领域中普遍存在的创伤知之甚少。因此,历史学家主要关注医学界对越战后心理创伤的理解。事实上,与战斗相关的精神病学研究帮助形成了早期的创伤观念,但同时存在的驱动力大多被忽视了。了解TIC的民间起源的更完整的历史叙述可以作为一个强大的工具,对过去创伤的患者产生真正的同情。从20世纪70年代初至今的期刊文章、报纸档案和医生问卷调查中,本文展示了妇女运动在形成PTSD的官方诊断、拆除家庭暴力禁忌以及开始向TIC迈进方面所做出的重大贡献。本文最后讨论了TIC培训在医学院课程中可能发挥的重要作用,然后分析了临床实践中实施TIC的障碍,最后提出了未来的方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Realize, Recognize, Respond: The Building of Trauma-Informed Care in Medicine
In December 2019, Western University delivered its first lecture on trauma-informed care (TIC) to its medical students. TIC is a universal treatment framework that involves realizing, recognizing, and responding to the effects of emotional trauma. The model shifts the question from “what is wrong with you?” to “what has happened to you?” This change in approach has only recently gained traction among medical professionals, perhaps because until recently, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was predominantly understood within the context of military trauma while much less was known about the pervasiveness of trauma within the civilian domain. Consequently, historians have largely focused on the medical community’s understanding of psychological trauma in the wake of the Vietnam War. Indeed, combat-related psychiatric research helped shape early ideas of trauma, but there existed concurrent driving forces that have been mostly overlooked. Knowledge of a more complete historical narrative of the civil origins of TIC may serve as a powerful tool to create genuine empathy towards patients with past trauma. Drawing on journal articles, newspaper archives, and physician questionnaires from the early 1970s to the present, this paper demonstrates the significant contributions made by the women’s movement in forming the official diagnosis of PTSD, in dismantling taboos surrounding domestic violence, and in initiating the move toward TIC. This paper concludes with a discussion of the important role that TIC training in medical school curriculums may hold, followed by an analysis of barriers to the implementation of TIC within clinical practice, and finally, suggested future directions.
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