This presentation will apply a trauma-informed lens to understanding how cycles of violence and psychiatric vulnerability affect women and their families during the childbearing year. Recent research shows how exposure to sexual trauma and other forms of child maltreatment and individuals’ reactions to such exposures in the form of posttraumatic stress and depression in particular imparts risk for adverse outcomes for mothers and babies. Recent advances in the field of epigenetics and neurobiology also show how enduring the effects of trauma can be. Fortunately, evidence is also emerging which suggests how trauma-informed and trauma-specific interventions can disrupt these cycles and ameliorate the effects of trauma. This session will overview current recommendations and best practices for adopting trauma-informed principles for any human service organization, and will specify how these recommendations can be applied to perinatal settings.
Learning Objectives:
Objective 1: Articulate key risk factors which present risk for trauma, posttraumatic stress, and depression for pregnant women.
Objective 2: Identify recent research findings regarding intergenerational transmission of trauma and vulnerability.
Objective 3: Apply key principles of trauma-informed care to perinatal service delivery settings.
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