Trauma Informed Care for Mothers Experiencing Homelessness
Why Trauma Matters
Trauma is the Norm
A history of violence and trauma is the norm for women and their children experiencing homelessness. For many mothers experiencing homelessness, trauma is something they experienced both as a child and as an adult. According to different studies, 90 percent have been abused by their intimate partners and 42 percent were sexually molested as children. Fifty to sixty percent of mothers experiencing homelessness became homeless because they were fleeing a violent relationship. Children experiencing homelessness are exposed to violence at very high rates. Many studies have shown that the event of homelessness itself has a traumatic effect on children as well and is tied to poor health, school, and mental health outcomes.
Unaddressed Trauma has Long-Term Even Multi-Generational Effects
Trauma fundamentally alters a woman’s ability to trust and feel safe. It has repercussions throughout her relationships and can lead to stress, depression, a variety of coping mechanisms including substance abuse and self-harm, and a failure to form proper bonds with her children. This in turn can have long- term health, mental health, and educational attainment effects on her children.
A ongoing cohort study following over 17,000 individuals overseen by the Centers for Disease Control and Kaiser Permanente of San Diego on the health effects of adverse childhood experiences (ACE Study) has found that trauma experienced during childhood is correlated with a broad spectrum of mental health disorders, risk-taking behaviors, adult intimate partner violence, negative health and disease outcomes, and even early death. The conclusions of the many research papers published on data from the ACE Study make it clear that traumatic events in childhood have far-reaching effects into the lives of those who experience them but also into the lives of their children, future spouses, and likely even their grandchildren and their future spouses. When a young mother finds herself homeless because she is fleeing domestic violence, it is a sad truth that her daughter is at much greater risk of finding herself in the same situation 15 years from now. When it comes to trauma, history has a tendency to repeat itself.
Stopping the Cycle of Trauma and Homelessness
For a mother, experiencing homelessness comes with many challenges. It is a daily challenge to get the services, support, food, and education a child needs. It can be difficult to deal with the family dynamics that arise when you are forced to raise your children in public, which is, in most cases, part of being a family experiencing homelessness. When you add the mother’s past trauma into the relationship, the situation becomes more stressful and the effect on the child is often a reduction in the attachment they need to feel safe and develop normally. There are a number of things that systems and programs that serve mothers experiencing homelessness can do to make the experience of homelessness more manageable and to ultimately break-through the trauma cycle to lead to safety and stability.
Read more on this important topic:
Information on trauma and female Veterans
Blog
Checklist: Ten Principles of Care for Families and Children Experiencing Homelessness
Trauma-Informed Care for Women Experiencing Homelessness and their Children
Helpful Websites
Homeless Resource Center
http://www.homeless.samhsa.gov/ Comprehensive resource hub for service providers on latest trainings, research, and best practices ...
Runaway and Homeless Youth Training and Technical Assistance Center
http://www.rhyttac.ou.edu/ The Runaway and Homeless Youth Training and Technical Assistance Center (RHYTTAC) serves a centralized ...
Videos and Webinars
Trauma-Informed Care for Women Experiencing Homelessness and their Children
Homelessness is a traumatic experience for young children who experience it. Many young mothers experiencing homelessness have also ...