When Treatment Becomes Trauma: Defining, Preventing, and Transforming Medical Trauma
Full description
Medical trauma, while not a common term in the lexicon of the health professions, is a phenomenon that deserves the attention of mental and physical healthcare providers. Trauma experienced as a result of medical procedures, illnesses, and hospital stays can have lasting effects. Those who experience medical trauma can develop clinically significant reactions such as PTSD, anxiety, depression, complicated grief, and somatic complaints. In addition to clinical disorders, secondary crises—including developmental, physical, existential, relational, occupational, spiritual, and of self—can lead people to seek counseling for ongoing support, growth, and healing. While counselors are central in treating the aftereffects of medical trauma and helping clients experience posttraumatic growth, the authors suggest the importance of mental health practitioners in the prevention and assessment of medical trauma within an integrated health paradigm.
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- typePdf
- created on
- file formatpdf
- file size394 kB
- container titleVISTAS Online
- copyright statusIn Copyright
- creatorMichelle Flaum Hall and Scott E. Hall
- issue2013
- publisherAmerican Counseling Association
- publisher placeAlexandria, VA
- rights holderAmerican Counseling Association