How Trauma Informed Care Can Change Your Medical Experience

Medical settings can feel stressful, especially after past traumatic experiences. Key points

  • Trauma-informed care brings humanity back to medicine. Healing starts when patients feel seen and safe.
  • Feeling anxious, numb, or avoidant during care may be signs of medical trauma and they deserve compassion.
  • Advocate for trauma-informed care. Your comfort and safety in medical settings matter.

We often think of trauma as something tied to war, natural disasters, or violent events. But for many people, trauma shows up in a quieter place: the exam room.

Whether you’re undergoing surgery, navigating chronic illness, receiving gynecological or fertility care, or even attending routine appointments, the medical setting can feel stressful, disorienting, dehumanizing, or even traumatic—especially for those with a history of difficult health experiences or previous traumatic events.

What if your medical care could feel safer, more compassionate, and more aligned with your emotional needs? That’s the intent of trauma-informed care (TIC), and it’s an approach every patient deserves.

What Is Trauma-Informed Care?

Trauma-informed care is a healthcare approach that recognizes how past trauma, medical or otherwise, can shape a patient’s current experience. It’s about understanding that even common procedures, language, or medical settings can trigger anxietyfeardistrustshame, or flashbacks to previous trauma for some patients. Trauma-informed care asks providers to treat patients not just as bodies to fix, but as whole people with complex and nuanced histories, emotions, and needs.

TIC prioritizes:

  • Emotional and physical safety
  • Clear, respectful communication
  • Patient empowerment and choice
  • Trust and collaboration
  • Cultural and historical awareness

Why Does It Matter?

Studies show that up to 90% of people have experienced at least one traumatic event in their lifetime. Patients enter treatment with pre-existing histories of trauma and are at risk of exposure to new trauma and triggering of past trauma during medical care

Trauma isn’t rare and neither is medical trauma. For many, past experiences of being ignored, shamed, misdiagnosed, or hurt in medical settings can resurface during new encounters. Research indicates that there is a low probability that patients have been assessed by their healthcare team for trauma, even though the emotional and medical risks of trauma exposure are well known and the risk of re-traumatization during receipt of medical care is common.

Without trauma-informed care, patients may:

  • Feel powerless or silenced
  • Avoid needed treatment out of fear
  • Freeze, dissociate, or panic during procedures
  • Leave appointments emotionally overwhelmed or retraumatized

Even routine interactions, like a pelvic exam, a rushed conversation, or a lack of privacy, can trigger deep discomfort if providers aren’t attuned to the emotional experience of care.

Signs You Might Be Carrying Medical Trauma

You might not realize you’re reacting to trauma in the moment. Warning signs can include:

  • Anxiety or dread before appointments
  • Panic, numbness, or “shutting down” during care
  • Avoidance of certain types of treatment or providers
  • Feeling small, helpless, or triggered by clinical settings
  • Emotional distress that lingers long after the visit

These responses are not weakness. They are survival strategies, and they deserve to be treated with compassion and respect.

How to Advocate for Trauma-Informed Medical Care

You don’t need to have a trauma diagnosis to ask for trauma-informed care. Your comfort matters. Your safety matters. Here are some ways to advocate for yourself:

  1. Name what you need: “I’ve had some hard experiences with medical care. Could you walk me through what to expect today?”
  2. Set boundaries: Ask for breaks, bring a support person, or ask for alternative options for exams or procedures.
  3. Ask for explanations: Request that providers explain what they’re doing and why before and during a procedure.
  4. Speak up about preferences: If a particular gender or provider helps you feel safer, ask for accommodations.
  5. Request continuity: Seeing the same provider or having consistent communication can ease anxiety and build trust.
  6. Seek CounselingTherapy can help you work through previous trauma and provide coping strategies to implement before, during, and after procedures.

What Providers Should Know

Trauma-informed care isn’t only about protecting patients, it also benefits healthcare professionals. It reduces burnout, fosters trust, and improves communication and outcomes.

Providers practicing trauma-informed care should:

  • Recognize and validate patients’ emotional experiences without blame
  • Modify clinic procedures to minimize potential trauma triggers
  • Foster patient-centered care that prioritizes safety, trust, and empowerment.
  • Acknowledge how culture, identity, and history shape patient experiences

A New Vision for Medical Care

It’s time to redefine what good healthcare looks like. It’s not just about lab results or successful surgeries; it’s about how patients feel in the process. Do they feel seen? Heard? Respected?

For many, healing begins not when the test comes back clear, but when a provider connects, makes eye contact, and says, “I hear you. I believe you. You’re safe here.” This type of attunement improves patient care and healthcare provider experiences leading to better patient outcomes and reduced clinician burnout.

Whether you’re a patient, a caregiver, or a provider, trauma-informed care is an invitation to bring humanity back into medicine and to make sure no one has to suffer in silence, especially not in the very place they go to seek help.

References

Hillcoat A, Prakash J, Martin L, Zhang Y, Rosa G, Tiemeier H, Torres N, Mustieles V, Adams CD, Messerlian C. Trauma and female reproductive health across the lifecourse: motivating a research agenda for the future of women’s health. Hum Reprod. 2023 Aug 1;38(8):1429-1444. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dead087. PMID: 37172265; PMCID: PMC10391316.

Kilpatrick DG, Resnick HS, Milanak ME, Miller MW, Keyes KM, Friedman MJ. National estimates of exposure to traumatic events and PTSD prevalence using DSM-IV and DSM-5 criteria. J Trauma Stress. 2013 Oct;26(5):537-47. doi: 10.1002/jts.21848. PMID: 24151000; PMCID: PMC4096796.

Lawson, A., & Swanson, A. (Eds.). (2024). Trauma-Informed Reproductive Healthcare. Springer Nature Switzerland AG. https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-67474-7 James, S et al., 2015

Lowery, D. F., & Outler, C. (2025). Couples Reproductive Trauma and Resilience Model (CRTRM): Employing a Trauma-Informed and Resilience Lens for Couples Navigating Infertility. Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1080/15332691.2025.2501725

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (2014) SAMHSA’s concept of truama and guidance for a trauma-informed approach. In (Vol. HHS Publication No. (SMA) 14–4884). Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

Zhang X, Deng X, Mo Y, Li Y, Song X, Li H. Relationship between infertility-related stress and resilience with posttraumatic growth in infertile couples: gender differences and dyadic interaction. Hum Reprod. 2021 Jun 18;36(7):1862-1870. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deab096. PMID: 33912966.

About the Author

Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly. Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly. Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly. Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly. Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly. Share a little biographical information to fill out your profile. This may be shown publicly.

More from Doctor Today

office 2021 activator ✓ Activate Microsoft Office 2021 fast ➤ Use simple steps like Command Prompt and scripts ★ Access full features now with easy methods

Source: Mark Stebnicki/Pexels. There is ever-growing interest in the ways in which a wide variety of nonhuman animals (animals) deal with the ups and downs of their lived experiences in many different contexts. In his new edited book, a third edition of Mental Health and Well-being in Animals, veterinarian Frank McMillan and his colleagues summarize how recent research […]

Self-stigma undermines empowerment and interferes with growth and healthcare.Key points Self-stigma has long been a subject of curiosity for me, both in my clinical work and my own life experience. There is a significant body of literature focusing on mental health stigma in its many forms—whether internalized, perpetuated by the public, or baked into the system itself. […]

ow to stay connected without losing yourself. Key points A recent message from a reader to us captured a quiet struggle that’s familiar in many close-knit communities. The writer described being deeply embedded in family, neighborhood, religious, and professional networks. These connections brought meaning and opportunity—but also exhaustion. People in their lives often felt entitled to comment […]

Search

Do not sell or share my personal information

We use third-party cookies to analyze site usage, store preferences, and deliver relevant content and ads. You can opt out anytime by selecting “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” and clicking “Save My Preferences.” To opt back in, simply uncheck the option and save.

For details on how we handle your personal information please read our Privacy Policy.