2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.pedn.2014.11.008
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Nurses' Views and Current Practice of Trauma-Informed Pediatric Nursing Care

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Cited by 74 publications
(88 citation statements)
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“…For example, a recent study found that pediatric nurses were fairly knowledgeable about and open to using a trauma-informed framework but that their current practice and self-rated competence varied most with regard to directly asking patients about traumatic events and educating parents and children about PTSS. 65 Another study found high overall acceptability for the implementation of a PTSS screening tool among both ED staff and patients. 66 These findings suggest that while providers value trauma-informed care practices, there are gaps in training, confidence, and support structures.…”
Section: Training Pediatric Healthcare Network In Trauma-informed Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, a recent study found that pediatric nurses were fairly knowledgeable about and open to using a trauma-informed framework but that their current practice and self-rated competence varied most with regard to directly asking patients about traumatic events and educating parents and children about PTSS. 65 Another study found high overall acceptability for the implementation of a PTSS screening tool among both ED staff and patients. 66 These findings suggest that while providers value trauma-informed care practices, there are gaps in training, confidence, and support structures.…”
Section: Training Pediatric Healthcare Network In Trauma-informed Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…While results (particularly those exploring symptom‐level associations with QOL) are preliminary, current results can help direct nurses towards specific signs and symptoms to watch for in their pediatric patients (e.g., children's startle response, children blaming themselves for their injury). Pediatric nurses have the unique opportunity to help minimize these symptoms and improve QOL in children after injury by integrating trauma‐informed approaches into their clinical care (Kassam‐Adams et al, ; Marsac et al, ). For example, nurses may want to assess and monitor specific re‐experiencing symptoms such as nightmares or an obsession with a part of medical care.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, among level I trauma centers that see children, only 20 percent systematically address posttraumatic stress in pediatric patients [15], and surveys of health care professionals indicate wide variation in knowledge and practice of trauma-informed pediatric care [16][17][18]. Nevertheless, practice standards are beginning to enumerate elements of trauma-informed care as key components of pediatric health care in such diverse areas as pediatric oncology [19] and pediatric trauma care [20].…”
Section: Practice Standards and The Ethical Case For Trauma-informed mentioning
confidence: 99%