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  1. Jul 21, 2021 · The premise around trauma-informed care is that supportive, nurturing relationships are critical to any type of healing. Pediatric nurses should be familiar with trauma and addressing trauma, regardless of whether adversity is known.

  2. By starting with strengths and re-framing negative talk around the child a healthcare provider continues to make actionable principles to decrease anxiety and trauma responses in the healthcare setting, regardless of what brings the child in for medical treatment.

  3. In many settings, nurses may experience workplace violence while caring for clients who are agitated or combative. This chapter will discuss adverse childhood experiences and trauma-informed care, abuse and neglect of children and vulnerable adults, intimate partner violence, and workplace violence.

    • Trauma-Informed Nursing Practice
    • 2022
  4. Nov 17, 2021 · The nurse should familiarize oneself with trauma screens in the pediatric healthcare setting. Trauma screens evaluate both past exposures to potentially traumatic events as well as any current or ongoing traumatic stress symptoms.

    • Anna Goddard, Erin Janicek, LuAnn Etcher
    • January-February 2022
    • 10.1016/j.pedn.2021.11.003
  5. Jun 1, 2023 · Signs of anger issues in a child can differ based on age, developmental level, and mental health diagnoses. However, behavioral and relational signs may be the first clue that your child is dealing with concerns that require professional treatment.

  6. Nov 25, 2015 · Anger management in primary care. James B Turner. 25 Nov 2015. Key learning points: – Introduce the context of anger management. – Review therapeutic approaches to anger management. – Reflect on your therapeutic approach. Anger and aggression can be viewed as both a problem and a normal part of development, as both benefits and risks to ...

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  8. Feb 4, 2022 · How to score and treat patient aggression. The multidisciplinary workgroup included child and adolescent psychiatrists, nurses and pediatric emergency medicine physicians. Together, they adapted the BVC’s key concepts that assess six behaviors and score a patient’s risk for becoming violent from small to severe.