2022
DOI: 10.1037/law0000339
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Trauma-informed forensic mental health assessment: Practical implications, ethical tensions, and alignment with therapeutic jurisprudence principles.

Abstract: The need for trauma-informed practice is well recognized across mental health and legal settings; however, relatively little has been written about its application in forensic mental health assessment. This article focuses on trauma-informed assessment of criminal justice involved individuals, given the high rates of trauma exposure and related sequelae in this population. A trauma-informed lens allows forensic mental health examiners to assess examinees in the context of their developmental histories and live… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 129 publications
(191 reference statements)
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“…Again, this might create further barriers to building trust and developing healthy relationships. According to Goldenson et al (2022), confirmation bias could also impact others involved in assisting trafficking survivors, for example, by leading judges to focus on information that confirms their preconceptions.…”
Section: Confirmation Biasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Again, this might create further barriers to building trust and developing healthy relationships. According to Goldenson et al (2022), confirmation bias could also impact others involved in assisting trafficking survivors, for example, by leading judges to focus on information that confirms their preconceptions.…”
Section: Confirmation Biasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trauma-informed care recognizes the effects of trauma on users of digital health technologies and provides theoretical approaches and practical guidance for how such technologies can be designed to be emotionally safe and empowering for all users [34]. Indeed, several digital health interventions have adopted trauma-informed approaches in designing and developing digital health interventions or produced trauma-informed recommendations that can be used to adapt old interventions or develop new digital health services [35][36][37][38]. Other researchers have developed trauma-informed web heuristics for designing human-centered information systems, including digital health [39].…”
Section: Trauma-informed Care In Digital Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The search results did not reveal any scoping or systematic review that has been conducted on our proposed topic. However, the search did return relevant articles that were used in formulating our search terms [13,[35][36][37][38].…”
Section: Trauma-informed Care In Digital Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CAMs are challenging in settings in which the reasons for the assessment are extrinsic to the clients, such as in forensic and mandatory assessments. While some of these methods (e.g., discussing the informed consent, discussing emotional reactions to testing, providing feedback about the assessment results) are recently advocated by some authors to be used also in these contexts (Evans, 2012;Fischer, 1985Fischer, /1994Goldenson et al, 2022), other methods are more problematic. For example, routinely engaging clients in interpreting their testing results could be seen as unreliable as patients may deliberately manipulate these interpretations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%