Anna T Booth
Jennifer McIntosh
Elizabeth Clancy
Eliza Hartley
Jessica Opie
Craig Olsson
Louise Newman
maternal and child health, nursing, trauma-informed practice, relational trauma, workforce training, phenomenology
AbstractObjective: We report on a qualitative study of community nurse encounters with early relational trauma in parent-infant dyads. Background: Early relational trauma involves interactional or emotional disturbance in the parent infant dyad. Earliest possible detection is needed to mitigate negative impacts on socio-emotional development, but early relational trauma is often challenging for practitioners to detect and respond to. Study design and methods: Maternal and Child Health nurses in Victoria, Australia received workforce training to address this. We interviewed 20 nurses both before and after they received specialist training, to understand their lived experiences in encountering client trauma and perceived changes to their professional confidence and competence post-training. The study comprised two areas of enquiry: i) a phenomenological analysis of nurses’ lived experiences in encountering possible trauma; and ii) a grounded theoretical analysis of the context of trauma encounters at baseline, and perceived change in competence at follow-up. Results: Nurses who coped well when working with trauma maintained a level of emotional distance and were able to draw on a repertoire of well-established practice skills. The specialist workforce training resulted in clear gains in nurses’ confidence and capacity to identify and respond to early relational trauma. Implications: Findings highlight a need for frontline services to provide specialist training and supervision in relational trauma and to cultivate cultures of communication and support. Such programs would optimally be deployed widely, to equip professionals with enhanced knowledge and confidence to create timely change in the face of early relational trauma.
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Booth AT, McIntosh J, Clancy E, Hartley E, Opie J, Olsson C, Newman L. Australian community nurses’ encounters with early relational trauma: a qualitative study of lived experiences and the impact of specialist training. Aust J Adv Nurs [Internet]. 2022 Aug. 30 [cited 2022 Aug. 31];39(3). Available from: https://www.ajan.com.au/index.php/AJAN/article/view/681
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