Trauma-Informed Supervision

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Child Welfare Practice Model
Child Welfare Supervisors
clinical mental health
Clinical Practice
compassion fatigue
Competence Constellation
Critical Incident Stress Management
CW Supervision
disaster response support
Emotional Exhaustion
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Event Supervision
identity intersectionality
indirect trauma
Integrated Care Settings
Intercultural Supervision
mental health services
neurobiology
Posttraumatic Growth
practitioner self-care strategies
Professional Development
psychological resilience
Racial Trauma
reflective supervision
Religious Abuse
SBIRT Service
secondary traumatic stress
supervision for trauma care professionals
Supervisory Relationship
The Clinical Supervisor
Tic
Tic Approach
trauma informed supervision
trauma-informed care
Traumatized Clients
vicarious traumatization
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367352806
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Survivors of trauma are disproportionately represented in agencies providing a broad range of behavioral, social, and mental health services. Practitioners in these settings must understand and be able to respond to survivors of trauma in ways that are empowering, normalize and validate their experiences and reactions, and minimize the risk of retraumatization. Practitioners also will be indirectly traumatized as a result of their work with trauma survivors.

Practitioners’ ability to help clients with histories of trauma depends upon clinical supervision that is trauma-informed. The trauma-informed supervisor has the dual responsibility of enhancing supervisees’ skills as trauma-informed practitioners and helping them manage the impact their work has on them.

Nevertheless, many clinical supervisors only have limited knowledge and training in trauma and may not recognize either the needs of those whom they supervise or the clients their supervisees serve. This book compiles important recommendations from trauma-informed practitioners, supervisors, and researchers who share their professional reflections and personal stories based on their hands-on experiences across mental health and medical contexts.

This book was originally published as a special issue of The Clinical Supervisor.

Carolyn Knight is a professor of Social Work at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States. She is a social worker with 30 years of experience, mostly pro bono, working individually and in groups with adult survivors of childhood trauma, particularly sexual abuse. She is the author of Introduction to Working with Adult Survivors of Childhood Trauma: Strategies and Skills (2008) and Group Therapy for Adult Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse (1996), co-editor of Group Work with Populations at Risk (with Geoffrey Grief, 4th ed., 2016), and co-author of a textbook on social work practice The life model of social work practice, 4th ed. Her recent presentations have focused on how to adopt a trauma-informed lens in clinical supervision and practice.

L. DiAnne Borders is the Burlington Industries Excellence Professor in the Counseling program at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, United States. She teaches clinical supervision and supervises doctoral students’ clinical supervision internships. Her current research focuses on supervision education and pedagogy as well as traumainformed supervision. She is the author of several books and numerous empirical and conceptual articles on clinical supervision, and serves as editor of The Clinical Supervisor.