Children's Research Triangle, Trauma Treatment Program: Increasing Trauma Services for Youth [1]
CRT's Trauma Treatment Program (TTP) provides research-driven, trauma-informed programming that aims to increase the availability of therapeutic services for children, adolescents and their families who are at significant risk for, or have experienced, potentially traumatic events including: domestic violence, community violence, traumatic grief, childhood maltreatment, sexual abuse/assault, multiple foster care placements, military deployment, combat injury or death, natural disasters, and serious accidents or injuries. The youth we serve often struggle with the effects of complex trauma, including neurobehavioral difficulties, developmental delays, emotional and behavioral problems, learning disabilities and a plethora of conditions that adversely affect the quality of their lives. Our TTP clinicians utilize well-established, developmentally appropriate screening and assessment tools to determine each child’s specific needs for treatment, which may include individual, group, family, and/or child-parent dyadic psychotherapy. As a former Community Treatment and Service Center for the SAMHSA-funded National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN), our therapists have received training in innovative treatment approaches that translate into trauma treatment of the highest industry standard and most effectively address the evolving needs of traumatized youth. Our interventions include a variety of evidence-based, trauma-informed approaches including Child Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), Structured Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Stress (SPARCS), Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC), Theraplay®, and Families OverComing Under Stress (FOCUS) for Military Families. In addition, they draw from attachment, developmental, sensory-motor, and psychodynamic models, as well as art therapy and mind/body techniques that best meet the individualized needs of each child and family.