What trauma-informed care means
Trauma-informed care (TIC) is an approach to services that recognizes the widespread impact of trauma and integrates this knowledge into practice. The SAMHSA model defines TIC around six principles: safety, trustworthiness and transparency, peer support, collaboration and mutuality, empowerment, and cultural sensitivity.
Why it matters
Trauma is extraordinarily prevalent. ACE (Adverse Childhood Experiences) research shows over 60% of adults report at least one adverse childhood experience. Trauma affects brain development, physiological regulation, behavior, and mental and physical health across the lifespan. Systems that don't account for trauma routinely retraumatize people — and providers who understand trauma produce significantly better outcomes.
TIC across settings
Trauma-informed approaches are relevant across healthcare, education, social services, and criminal justice — anywhere humans in distress interact with institutions. In mental health specifically, trauma-informed providers approach behavior not with judgment but with curiosity: "What happened to this person, and what purpose does this behavior serve?"
Asking your provider "Do you use a trauma-informed approach?" is a reasonable and important question. A good answer describes specific practices — safe environment, collaborative relationships, avoiding retraumatization. A vague answer warrants follow-up questions.