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Two NEW resources for trauma clinicians working across diverse cultures by Leah Giarratano in 2025
09/12/2024
A valuable text and interactive training package to integrate cultural understanding into trauma treatment.
We are pleased to share the release of Clinical Skills for Managing Trauma Across Cultures: Risk, Response, and Treatment Strategies by Dr Leah Giarratano, ISBN 9781920902117. Designed for mental health professionals, the text balances research, reflective practice, and practical tools to support trauma recovery across cultural contexts. Available from 13 January 2025, this book provides insights for clinicians committed to culturally responsive trauma care.
To accompany the book, an interactive training package will be available before mid-2025. This professional development program offers flexible online learning, featuring lectures, real case studies, videos, learning quizzes, and practical clinical tools. Whether as a standalone course or a tailored complement to Dr Giarratano's four-day Trauma Training Series, this program equips clinicians with skills they can use immediately in their practice.
The text and training explore important topics, including:
- Understanding and addressing trauma risks in marginalised groups, including race-based trauma, gender-based violence, refugee experiences, and other groups with unique cultural norms, such as LGBTIQA+ people, people with disabilities, emergency services personnel, military personnel, and prison communities.
- Developing cultural humility and adapting therapeutic approaches to align with clients' unique cultural contexts.
- Applying evidence-based interventions and community-driven healing practices to enhance trauma care.
Both offerings are an invitation to clinicians to deepen their understanding of culture's role in trauma recovery. With practical clinical strategies and introspective exercises, they offer support for therapists striving to provide care that is inclusive and culturally responsive.
Discover how these resources can enhance your practice and cultural responsiveness. Please contact us if you wish to be advised when the book or training becomes available.
2025 Trauma Education with Dr Leah Giarratano for mental health professionals
09/12/2024
Core training for mental health professionals working with traumatised populations. These two acclaimed, highly practical, science-based professional development workshops will underpin your clinical practice in this field. The content is applicable to both adult and adolescent populations. The four-day program attracts 42 trauma-focused professional development hours and is available as an engaging self-paced online program, a highly interactive livestream, across Australia and New Zealand, and also internationally to groups of 40 mental health professionals upon request. Our 2025 offerings are listed here
Trauma Education Series background
Since Judith Herman’s
conceptualisation of complex trauma, the past 20 years have seen the emergence
of a range of clinically effective treatments for some of our most challenged
and challenging clients. A paradigm shift in treatment is occurring, and with
that a need for all treatment providers to understand when cognitive
behavioural interventions for the traumatised are indicated, and when other,
more experiential, but still empirically-validated, approaches are
required. A significant controversy has recently emerged in the clinical
literature, challenging the current best-practice model of phase-based
treatment for traumatised clients:
·
Is Phase One – the ‘stabilisation phase’ – too ‘conservative’, even
unnecessary? Is it just a holding period, ‘supportive counselling’, an inefficient
use of treatment sessions, even an unethical delay to effective treatment,
rather than an active change agent in the traumatised client’s life?
·
Is Phase Two – processing traumatic memories – the ‘real’ therapy or
‘work’, that we should be getting on with as soon as possible, rather than
delaying these ‘front‐line trauma‐focused treatments’ (e.g., prolonged
exposure, EMDR) because of a possibly unwarranted concern that the CPTSD client
will be adversely affected or drop out early?
Important, well-executed
treatment studies have recently been investigating these questions, and
evidence has emerged indicating that some complex trauma survivors do benefit
from processing their traumatic memories as a priority. There remains, however,
a group of particularly severely affected clients excluded from these studies,
and for whom a more staged-based, stabilisation approach is
indicated. This training will explain when exposure-based interventions
are indicated and appropriate and when other therapeutic needs must be
addressed first.
This trauma training
series takes the position that the goals of Phase One of CPTSD therapy are
intensely important therapeutic change agents for Complex PTSD clients
(CPTSD). Underlying the Phase One goals of affect regulation;
establishing safety; relationship skills training and establishing a healthy
therapeutic relationship are profoundly important human needs that have been
unmet in the CPTSD survivor’s life. These include the ability to mentalise; to
develop an internal safe base to help tolerate and organise terrifying internal
experiences, with a view to being able to securely explore the world and
others; to effectively collaborate with people, when people have been the cause
of their complex trauma; and to achieve these foundations through a stable,
observing and well-bounded therapeutic alliance, which itself becomes a major
change agent.
And, of course,
clinicians who consider themselves experienced in treating traumatic stress
disorders should be proficient in Phase Two, or processing traumatic memories,
using one or more of the evidence-based therapeutic procedures that do so. For
PTSD clients, the therapeutic path to these treatments may be quite rapid and
direct, which may also be the case for some CPTSD clients, while other CPSTD
clients may require Phase One treatments first to assist in trust and therapy
engagement, emotion regulation, and destructive problem behaviours that are
inhibiting client safety, e.g., severe suicidal/ self-harm behaviours, violent
relationship status. This approach is in line with the present-day
position taken by the originator of the term ‘complex PTSD’, Judith Herman
(2020).
The author of this
training series has worked and taught extensively in both CPTSD and PTSD and
has produced a program that synthesises approaches from a variety of modalities
and techniques that are publishing positive outcomes for these clients, and then
presents them using actual cases for immediate, practical, clinical
application. There is more hope for our traumatised clients than
ever before, and these two training programs will equip graduate clinicians
with the knowledge and the skills to improve the lives of their PTSD and
complex PTSD patients.
Please note that you
are required to attend Day 1-2 (Treating PTSD) before attending Day 3-4
(Treating Complex Trauma), as essential material is covered in the first
workshop and not repeated in the second. The programs work together and while
people may choose to do the first but not the second; they don't work the other
way around. Dr Leah Giarratano has been treating traumatised clients since
1995, and training health professionals across Australia and New Zealand since
1996. These two programs are designed to work together and offer core
instruction in the treatment of PTSD and complex trauma.
Watch Leah
Giarratano present an overview of: Trauma Education: Day 1-4, Treating
PTSD: Day 1-2 and Treating Complex Trauma: Day 3-4
Reference Herman, J. (2020).
Forward. In C.A. Courtois & J.D. Ford (Ed.,), Treating Complex Traumatic
Stress Disorders: Scientific Foundations and Therapeutic Models. New York: The
Guilford Press.