Articles

Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Veterans Community Reintegration and Behavioral Health Support
Veteran-serving community programs often support people navigating layered trauma, moral injury, chronic pain, substance use, and complex system navigation across VA and non-VA partners. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care is operationalized in veteran reintegration and behavioral health support through structured engagement, crisis planning, and accountable coordination across U.S. systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Refugee, Asylum, and Immigration-Adjacent Community Services
Refugee and asylum-serving programs routinely support people with complex trauma, loss, and ongoing uncertainty while operating within tight funding rules and high-stakes legal and safety constraints. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care is operationalized in day-to-day delivery—intake, case management, referrals, and crisis response—so services remain consistent, dignified, and audit-ready across U.S. systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Aging, Long-Term Services, and Community-Based Supports
Older adults receiving long-term services often carry lifelong trauma alongside cognitive change, loss of autonomy, and complex care transitions. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care must be operationalized in aging and long-term services to protect dignity, reduce crisis escalation, and maintain safe, auditable delivery across U.S. systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Corrections Reentry and Community Reintegration Services
People leaving jail or prison face one of the most destabilizing transitions in the U.S. system, often carrying layered trauma, disrupted care, and intense supervision requirements. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care must be operationalized in reentry and reintegration services to reduce recidivism, prevent crisis use, and stabilize engagement across housing, health, and supervision systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Supported Employment and Workforce Programs (IPS, VR, and Community Employment Services)
Employment programs often serve people whose trauma histories affect trust, disclosure, and persistence—especially when benefits, court requirements, or family instability add pressure. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care is operationalized in supported employment and workforce services through predictable engagement, boundary-setting, accommodations, and measurable governance across partners. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Medicaid Managed Care Utilization Management and Care Coordination
Medicaid managed care organizations and care coordination entities make decisions that shape access, continuity, and escalation risk—often for members with significant trauma histories. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed practice can be operationalized inside utilization management, authorizations, denials, and care coordination so decisions are consistent, defensible, and less likely to trigger disengagement or crisis use. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Adult Protective Services and Safeguarding Interventions
Adult Protective Services and safeguarding programs regularly intervene at the intersection of trauma, coercion, cognitive impairment, and risk. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care must be operationalized in investigations, safety planning, and interagency coordination to protect adults without reproducing control, fear, or disengagement. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Hospital Discharge Planning and Transitional Care
Hospital discharge is one of the highest-risk points in any care pathway, particularly for people with trauma histories, cognitive overload, or fragmented social supports. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care must be operationalized in discharge planning and transitional care to reduce avoidable readmissions, escalation, and disengagement across complex U.S. health systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Peer Support and Recovery Community Organizations
Peer support and recovery community organizations often hold the most trusted relationships in a local system—especially for people whose trauma histories make formal services feel unsafe or controlling. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care is built into peer workflows, boundaries, and governance so support remains voluntary, safe, and measurable across partnerships. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Integrated Primary Care and Behavioral Health (FQHCs and Community Clinics)
Integrated primary care and behavioral health settings increasingly carry “first contact” responsibility for people with trauma histories—often before specialty mental health can engage. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care is operationalized in workflow design, staff roles, and governance so it holds under volume, risk, and cross-system handoffs. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Case Management and Care Coordination
Case management is where trauma-informed care either becomes a stable operating model—or dissolves into fragmented referrals and repeated retelling of painful histories. This article explains how to run trauma-informed, psychologically informed case management with concrete workflows, oversight expectations, and measurable assurance mechanisms across complex systems. Read more...
Trauma-Informed and Psychologically Informed Care in Schools and Youth-Serving Community Programs
Schools and youth programs often become the first responders to trauma: behavioral crises, attendance collapse, family stress, and escalating conflict. This article explains how trauma-informed and psychologically informed care operates as concrete workflows in school-linked and community youth settings, with governance controls commissioners can fund and providers can evidence. Read more...