University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
J Prev Interv Community. 2024 Apr-Jun;52(2):272-299. doi: 10.1080/10852352.2024.2408503. Epub 2024 Oct 10.
Evidence-informed trauma interventions developed specifically and Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) that address racial, historical, and intergenerational trauma are sparse, particularly for youth. To meet this need, the current study developed and piloted a new intervention - (TRANSFORM) - using a and community-engaged research-to-practice approach. Across two phases, we documented the community-participatory development of TRANSFORM and analyzed preliminarily quantitative data collected in a pilot study with = 19 BIPOC youth. Phase 1 reports on the process and lessons learned from the community centered co-development. The phase 2 pilot study results revealed statistically significant pretest-to-posttest reductions in racial discrimination stress as well as trauma-related symptoms interfering with daily functioning for youth. Implications for community-based approaches to disrupting and healing racial stress and trauma within and across youth-serving systems are discussed.
专门针对黑人、原住民和有色人种(BIPOC)开发的循证创伤干预措施,以及解决种族、历史和代际创伤的干预措施仍然稀缺,尤其是针对青年群体。为了满足这一需求,本研究采用循证研究实践方法,开发并试行一种新的干预措施——(Transform)。在两个阶段中,我们记录了 Transform 的社区参与式发展,并对 19 名 BIPOC 青年进行的试点研究中的初步定量数据进行了分析。第 1 阶段报告了以社区为中心的共同发展过程中的经验教训。第 2 阶段的试点研究结果表明,与种族歧视压力相关的创伤后症状以及与日常生活功能相关的创伤后症状均有统计学意义的减少。讨论了在青年服务系统内和跨系统中基于社区的方法来打破和治疗种族压力和创伤的意义。