Confronting the Social Determinants of Health: Has the Language of Trauma Informed Care Become a Defense Mechanism?
Shira BirnbaumPublished in: Issues in mental health nursing (2019)
Many writers have been calling for the incorporation of trauma-informed care (TIC) in nursing education and practice, with some recently advocating the adoption of formal TIC competencies in psychiatric nursing. In light of this heightened interest, it is worth engaging seriously with criticisms of TIC. This paper reviews some of the published criticisms of TIC, starting with those emerging from within the TIC scholarly community. These focus mostly on matters of methodological rigor and conceptual clarity. It then presents critiques that emerge through the lenses of feminism, cultural sociology, and psychoanalysis. These focus on the shift away from political and historical consciousness in some TIC language and call attention to discursive mechanisms that split off our concern for patients from concern about ongoing social determinants of trauma in the world. The paper then addresses the implications for TIC in nursing, advocating a social justice orientation to the teaching of trauma.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- mental health
- quality improvement
- deep brain stimulation
- trauma patients
- autism spectrum disorder
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- mental illness
- primary care
- newly diagnosed
- public health
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- working memory
- global health
- nursing students
- electronic health record
- patient reported