Section 1: Trauma Practice
We recommend that you use consistent language across your services. In this section, you will find further information and guidance on the key trauma-informed principles behind this; how to develop a consistent language and how this can be used to evidence your approach.
Using clear and consistent language to describe your practice:
- empowers survivors to make informed choices about the support they can access.
- supports the development of a more trauma-informed, joined-up system overall, facilitating survivors to transition between services and agencies.
- allows you to more easily communicate with funders and other stakeholders about the range of services you offer and their impact
- enables your approach to be grounded in the best evidence-based practice. Furthermore it facilitates shared learning across different approaches - building understanding of what works and why.
IN THIS SECTION
1
Key Principles and Practice
- Ensuring that your service is grounded in the core values of Trauma-Informed Practice.
- Aligning activities with the Herman Model of Recovery
2
Shared Language and Terminology
- Describing wellbeing activities and interventions
- Describing integrative and person-centered counselling
- Describing counselling and trauma treatment.