What Is Trauma-Informed Therapy?
What Is Trauma-Informed Therapy?
The effects of trauma can last throughout a person’s lifetime. Depending on their age at the time of trauma, this can mean years or decades of physical and mental health struggles. It is not uncommon for someone with a history of trauma to misunderstand the depth of harm trauma at any age can cause.
When seeking counseling for trauma to overcome related mental health struggles, it is essential to choose a program that follows a trauma-informed care model. Trauma-informed therapy follows proven practices and therapeutic techniques to help providers work more effectively with patients with a trauma history.1

What Is Trauma?
The American Psychological Association defines trauma as “an emotional response to a terrible event like an accident, rape or natural disaster.” 2 When someone experiences a traumatic event, they may develop trauma symptoms or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
It is essential to remember that trauma does not have to directly impact the individual for them to experience traumatic symptoms. Trauma symptoms can develop after learning of a traumatic event that affected a friend or loved one or even when watching something traumatic on television. No matter the cause of trauma, finding a treatment center specializing in trauma-informed care is essential to achieving lasting health and wellness.
Symptoms of Trauma
Unfortunately, this is not the case for all. Some trauma victims will experience lasting effects of trauma for weeks or years to come.
Symptoms of Long-Term Trauma
These symptoms can greatly affect people’s daily lives. Trauma-informed therapy can help people move forward from trauma by finding healthy, constructive ways to manage difficult emotions.
Principles of the Trauma-Informed Approach
Physical and Emotional Safety
Collaboration
Transparency
Peer Support
Cultural, Historical, and Gender Awareness
Humility and Responsiveness
Benefits of Trauma-Focused Therapy
Learn About Trauma
Re-Establish Safety
Identify Triggers
Develop Healthy Coping Skills
Decrease in Traumatic Stress Symptoms
Trauma therapy sessions can help patients learn and reinforce the tools they can use to reduce the intensity of traumatic stress symptoms and other mental health challenges that frequently occur after trauma.
Practice Trauma Processing or Integration

Key Ingredients of Trauma-Informed Organizational Practices
There are several key ingredients to successful trauma-informed practices. Each is important to ensure patients overcome mental health challenges stemming from past or current trauma feel safe and supported at all times during treatment. These include:
- Leading and Communicating About the Transformation Process
- Engaging Patients in Organizational Planning
- Training Clinical and Non-Clinical Staff Members
- Creating a Safe Environment
- Preventing Secondary Traumatic Stress in Staff
How to Know if a Therapist is Trauma-Informed
Some questions to consider include asking about their educational background, specializations, experience with trauma patients, their approach to trauma counseling, and what qualities make them trauma-informed practitioners.
Treatment at Alta Centers
At Alta Centers, we understand the importance of approaching trauma care using the guiding principles that help patients feel safe and supported as they work towards lasting emotional health and wellness.
If you would like to learn more about how our providers apply a trauma-informed approach to mental health care, contact a member of our admissions team at Alta Centers today.
Questions About Treatment?
Our knowledgeable team is ready to discuss your situation and options. Your call is confidential with no obligation required.
What is an Intervention?
In a situation involving substance use disorder, planning an intervention may be the best, and safest, option to help someone who is living with an addiction. So, what does intervention mean? An intervention is a strategically planned process of confronting the person who is living with addiction about the consequences of their actions while simultaneously encouraging them to accept help and treatment for their addiction.1
The key feature of an intercession is that while it can be an immensely helpful option in convincing a person that they should seek treatment, it should not be done solely by friends and family members. Without the aid of a specialist, or someone who is equally trained in the process of interventions, an intervention may do more harm than good.
An intervention specialist is someone that has been professionally trained in helping people break free from their addictions. They can help a person without judgment, emotions, or blame to understand how their actions are negatively impacting themselves and those that they care about.
When performed properly, without judgment or pressure, and with the aid of a qualified intercession specialist, 80-90% of substance use interventions are successful in convincing the patient to seek help.
Early Intervention
Treatment is more effective the earlier that it begins for an alcohol or drug abuse disorder. As with any other health condition, early intervention and treatment can prevent more significant problems further on in life.
Unfortunately, in many cases, an alcohol addiction intervention or a drug abuse intercession does not take place until most other options have been exhausted. It can be difficult for those struggling with a substance use disorder to realize or admit that they need help.
It often takes a life-altering event, such as a divorce, loss of employment, or a housing crisis for a person to be willing to seek treatment. Because early
alcohol and drug intercession can be so beneficial, first responders must be able to recognize the symptoms of substance abuse.3
What is a Nursing Intervention?
Nursing interventions are often the first time a patient will experience care for their disorder. It takes place when someone enters a care facility such as a clinic or hospital for a condition that may or may not be caused or exacerbated by their substance use disorder.
After initial evaluation and stabilization, a nurse will take action to help their patient by suggesting healthy physical or emotional coping mechanisms for a patient that wants to quit using the substance that they are addicted to. The nurse will also be able to offer education and information to the patient about other treatment facilities or care providers that can help them on their road to recovery.
Alcohol Intervention

A Further Look at Interventions
Nearly 50% of adults in America regularly drink alcohol, and it is believed that as many as 25% of those Americans have an alcohol addiction, most commonly in the form of binge drinking. In many situations, once a person with an alcohol use disorder realizes the way that alcohol is negatively impacting their life, they can reduce the amount that they drink, or even quit entirely, without outside assistance.
However, some people that have an alcohol use disorder are unable to see how their addiction is negatively affecting them. In this situation, an alcohol use intercession can be extremely beneficial. Some of the benefits of interventions include:
- Showing the person with the addiction the consequences of their actions to this point as well as the potential consequences that may happen if they do not seek treatment.
- Showing them the available treatment options, and helping them understand that people are willing to help them with their addiction.
- Showing them how their alcohol addiction has impacted their friends and family members.
- Showing them that things are not hopeless, that they can recover, and that they can take charge of their life once more.
Drug Intervention

A Further Look at Interventions
Over nineteen million adults struggle with a drug abuse disorder and of those, nearly 74% also struggle with a co-existing alcohol abuse disorder. Drug abuse and addiction can be a much harder disorder to recover from than alcohol addiction, particularly due to the high rate of co-use that most people with a substance use disorder experience.
In many cases, suddenly stopping the use of an illicit substance can be just as harmful, if not more so than using the substance itself. The side effects and withdrawal symptoms that a person may experience when they decide to stop using a substance can be severe and at times life-threatening.
Luckily, substance use is a highly treatable disorder and several medications can help a person wean off of illicit substances in a safe, sustained, and monitored manner. A drug abuse intervention can help someone realize that they have options and that they can recover safely and healthily.
Resources
- https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/mental-illness/in-depth/intervention/art-20047451
- https://www.associationofinterventionspecialists.org/intervention-what-is-the-success-rate/
- https://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov/executive-summary/report/early-intervention-treatment-and-management-substance-use-disorders
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK559081/
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5844156/
- https://www.associationofinterventionspecialists.org/what-is-arise-intervention/
Questions About Treatment?
Our knowledgeable team is ready to discuss your situation and options. Your call is confidential with no obligation required.