Table 4.
Specific aspect of trauma-informed care | Providers ratings (n, %) | ||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
Very competent |
Somewhat competent |
Not competent |
|
1. Engaging with traumatized patients so that they feel comfortable talking to you/comforted by you. | 53 (36.1) | 84 (57.1) | 10 (6.8) |
2. Responding calmly and without judgment to a patient’s strong emotional distress. | 87 (59.2) | 59 (40.1) | 1 (0.7) |
3. Eliciting details of a traumatic event from a patient without re-traumatizing them. | 25 (22.4) | 86 (58.5) | 36 (24.5) |
4. Educating patients about common traumatic stress reactions and symptoms. | 24 (16.3) | 75 (51) | 48 (32.7) |
5. Avoiding or altering situations within the hospital that a patient might experience as traumatic. | 29 (19.7) | 85 (57.8) | 33 (22.4) |
6. Responding to a patient’s question about whether he/she will die. | 44 (29.9) | 82 (56.8) | 21 (14.3) |
7. Assessing a patient’s distress, emotional needs, and support systems soon after a traumatic event. | 29 (19.7) | 101 (68.7) | 17 (11.6) |
8. Providing basic trauma-focused interventions (assessing symptoms normalizing, providing anticipatory guidance, coping assistance). | 38 (25.9) | 85 (57.8) | 24 (16.3) |
9. Understanding how traumatic stress may present itself differently in patients of different ages, gender, or cultures. | 24 (16.3) | 84 (57.1) | 39 (26.5) |
10. Understanding the scientific or empirical basis behind assessment and intervention for traumatic stress. | 16 (10.9) | 82 (55.8) | 49 (33.3) |