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OBJECTIVES

Health professionals need training to provide trauma-informed care (TIC) for children with adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), which can affect short- and long-term health. We summarize and evaluate published curricula for health professionals on ACEs and TIC.

METHODS

We searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PsychInfo, and MedEdPORTAL through January 2021. Studies meeting the following criteria were included: Described teaching interventions on ACEs, TIC, and child abuse and maltreatment; included health care providers or trainees as learners; were written in English; included an abstract; and described a curriculum and evaluation. We reviewed 2264 abstracts, abstracted data from 79 studies, and selected 51 studies for qualitative synthesis.

RESULTS

Studies focused on ACEs/TIC (27), child abuse (14), domestic/intimate partner violence (6), and child maltreatment/parental physical punishment (4). Among these 51 studies, 43 were published since 2010. Learners included a mix of health professionals (34) and students (17). Duration, content, and quality of the 51 curricula were highly variable. An analysis of 10 exemplar curricula on ACEs and/or TIC revealed high and very high quality for methods and moderate to very high quality for curriculum evaluation, suggesting that they may be good models for other educational programs. Four of the 10 exemplars used randomized controlled trials to evaluate efficacy. Studies were limited to English language and subject to publication bias.

CONCLUSIONS

ACEs and TIC are increasingly relevant to teaching health professionals, especially pediatricians, and related teaching curricula offer good examples for other programs.

Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) were first defined by Felitti et al1  in a milestone study in 1998, and several follow-up publications26  ensued. The National Child Traumatic Stress Network has expanded Felitti’s original 7 ACEs to 10: (1) physical abuse, (2) sexual abuse, (3) emotional abuse, (4) physical neglect, (5) emotional neglect, (6) violence against the mother, (7) household members who were substance abusers, (8) household members who had a mental illness or were suicidal, (9) household member ever been imprisoned, and (10) loss of a parent to separation or divorce.7 

Traumatic experiences can produce toxic stress in children, which alters brain architecture and permanently damages developing immunologic, neurologic, and cognitive systems,8  especially without caregiver mitigation.9  These conditions can result in compromised executive function,10  mental health problems,11  learning difficulties,12,13  and other social problems. The long-term effects of these conditions are well established: ACEs threaten the health of more than two thirds of adults in the United States.1  They contribute to many leading causes of death and morbidity, including pulmonary disease,2  lung cancer,3  liver disease,4  and autoimmune disorders.5 

Pediatricians must identify and address these problems proactively and need to understand ACEs and provide trauma-informed care (TIC).14  TIC is a framework to minimize the effects of trauma by addressing distress and offering emotional support to promote recovery.14  TIC aims to minimize the potential for medical care itself to trigger trauma reactions.14  Many national organizations have highlighted the importance of addressing ACEs in pediatric care to improve lifelong health. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) dedicated the Peds 21 conference to addressing gaps in TIC.15  The AAP is extending this initiative through its ongoing Trauma and Resilience Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes program by implementing Pediatric Approach to Trauma, Treatment, and Resilience training to teach pediatric providers foundational and in-depth concepts about child trauma.16  In the literature, awareness is growing about health manifestations attributable to ACEs in adults, including recent systematic reviews of adult resilience factors,17,18  but information is limited on how to address these social determinants of health in children. How well medical professionals are being educated about ACEs and ways to build the resilience of traumatized youth are unclear. To our knowledge, no systematic review identifying and analyzing existing teaching interventions to address this gap in knowledge has been published.

Through critical appraisal of existing ACE and TIC teaching curricula, we aimed to identify the best available educational resources and highlight educational gaps so that we can teach the next generation of health care providers, especially pediatricians, to provide culturally sensitive, relevant, and timely care to children who have experienced trauma. Because previous authors have reported that many practicing pediatricians and medical providers have had limited training and experience in handling ACEs and feel unprepared to identify and care for children who have experienced trauma,19,20  we hypothesized that there are insufficient high-quality teaching resources on ACEs to teach general practitioners or medical trainees. In this review, we aimed to provide resources to educators by (1) identifying studies that address teaching health professionals about ACEs and TIC and (2) describing these studies by intervention type, targeted learners, and content and analyzing the quality of their teaching and curriculum evaluation methods. We provide a detailed analysis of 10 exemplar curricula2130  chosen for quality and variety. The long-term objective of this systematic review is to help medical educators, especially those in pediatric training programs, to expand educational offerings for health professionals whose patients are at risk for poor health outcomes as a result of ACEs.

Methods for this systematic review are specified in the protocol registered on January 3, 2020, with PROSPERO (no. CRD42020148077),31  the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews. The review followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses32  guidelines.

A medical librarian (J.R.) searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PsychInfo, and MedEdPORTAL from inception through January 2021. A comprehensive search strategy for each database used relevant keywords and controlled vocabulary to identify publications addressing educational curricula for medical, nursing, and allied health professionals and students that focused on TIC or ACE concepts (Table 1).

TABLE 1

Search Terms for Systematic Review

DatabaseKeywords
PubMed (adverse childhood experiences[MeSH terms] OR “adverse childhood experiences”[title/abstract] OR child abuse[MeSH terms] OR “child abuse”[title/abstract] OR “child maltreatment”[title/abstract] OR “childhood maltreatment”[title/abstract] OR “trauma informed care”[title/abstract] OR “toxic stress”[title/abstract]) AND (“Education, Medical”[MeSH] OR “Education, Nursing”[MeSH] OR “Nursing/education”[MeSH] OR “Pediatrics/education”[MeSH] OR “Social Work/education”[MeSH] OR “Social Work, Psychiatric/education”[MeSH] OR “Psychology/education”[MeSH] OR “Psychiatry/education”[MeSH] OR “medical education”[title/abstract] OR “nursing education”[title/abstract] OR curriculum[MeSH Terms] OR teaching[MeSH Terms]) 
Embase ('childhood adversity'/de OR 'adverse childhood event':ab OR 'adverse childhood experience':ab OR 'adverse childhood experiences':ab OR 'adverse experiences in childhood':ab OR 'adverse experiences in early childhood':ab OR 'adverse experiences in infancy':ab OR 'child adverse experiences':ab OR 'childhood adverse experience':ab OR 'childhood adversities':ab OR 'childhood adversity':ab OR 'deleterious childhood experiences':ab OR 'child abuse'/de OR 'abused child':ab OR 'child abuse':ab OR 'child maltreatment':ab OR 'child mistreatment':ab OR 'childhood abuse':ab OR 'childhood maltreatment':ab OR 'childhood mistreatment':ab OR 'pediatric abuse':ab OR 'pediatric abuse':ab OR 'pediatric maltreatment':ab OR 'trauma informed care'/exp OR 'toxic stress':ti,ab) AND ('medical education'/de OR 'area health education centers':ti,ab OR 'education, medical':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, continuing':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, graduate':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, undergraduate':ti,ab OR 'education, premedical':ti,ab OR 'education, public health professional':ti,ab OR 'fellowships and scholarships':ti,ab OR 'internship and residency':ti,ab OR 'medical education':ti,ab OR 'medical instruction':ti,ab OR 'medical program':ti,ab OR 'medical program':ti,ab OR 'medical teaching':ti,ab OR 'medical training':ti,ab OR 'training, medical':ti,ab OR 'nursing education'/de OR 'education, nursing':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, associate':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, baccalaureate':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, continuing':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, diploma programmes':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, diploma programs':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, graduate':ti,ab OR 'faculty, nursing':ti,ab OR 'nurse education':ti,ab OR 'nursing education':ti,ab OR 'nursing education research':ti,ab OR 'nursing school':ti,ab OR 'schools, nursing':ti,ab OR 'pediatrics education'/exp OR 'social work education'/exp OR 'education, social work':ti,ab OR 'social work education':ti,ab OR 'psychology education'/exp OR 'psychiatry education'/exp OR 'curriculum'/mj OR 'competency-based education':ti,ab OR 'curriculum':ti,ab OR 'integrated curriculum':ti,ab OR 'mainstreaming (education)':ti,ab OR 'teaching'/mj OR 'computer-assisted instruction':ti,ab OR 'programmed instruction':ti,ab OR 'programmed instruction as topic':ti,ab OR 'programmed teaching':ti,ab OR 'teaching':ti,ab OR 'teaching aid':ti,ab OR 'teaching material':ti,ab OR 'teaching materials':ti,ab OR 'teaching method':ti,ab OR 'teaching program':ti,ab OR 'teaching program':ti,ab OR 'teaching, programmed':ti,ab) 
Web of Science (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “child abuse” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “trauma informed care” OR “toxic stress”) AND (“Education, Medical” OR “Medical education” OR “Education, Nursing” OR “Nursing education” OR “Pediatrics education” OR “Social Work education” OR “Social Work, Psychiatric/education” OR “Psychology education” OR “Psychiatry education” OR Curriculum OR teaching) 
CINAHL (MH “Adverse Childhood Experiences” OR MH “Child Abuse+” OR “Toxic stress” OR “Trauma informed care”) AND (MH “Education, Social Work” OR MH “Education, Medical+” OR MH “Education, Nursing+” OR MH “Psychiatry+/ED” OR MH “Pediatrics+/ED” OR MH “Psychology+/ED” OR MH “Curriculum+” OR MH “Curriculum Development”) 
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “child abuse” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “trauma informed care” OR “toxic stress”) AND (“Education, Medical” OR “Medical education” OR “Education, Nursing” OR “Nursing education” OR “Pediatrics education” OR “Social Work education” OR “Psychology education” OR “Psychiatry education” OR curriculum OR teaching) 
PsychInfo (“child abuse” OR “adverse childhood experiences” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “toxic stress” OR “trauma informed care”) AND (“medical education” OR “nursing education” OR “psychiatric training” OR “social work education” OR curriculum OR teaching) 
MedEdPORTAL (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “li” OR “trauma informed care” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment”) AND (curriculum OR teaching OR education) 
DatabaseKeywords
PubMed (adverse childhood experiences[MeSH terms] OR “adverse childhood experiences”[title/abstract] OR child abuse[MeSH terms] OR “child abuse”[title/abstract] OR “child maltreatment”[title/abstract] OR “childhood maltreatment”[title/abstract] OR “trauma informed care”[title/abstract] OR “toxic stress”[title/abstract]) AND (“Education, Medical”[MeSH] OR “Education, Nursing”[MeSH] OR “Nursing/education”[MeSH] OR “Pediatrics/education”[MeSH] OR “Social Work/education”[MeSH] OR “Social Work, Psychiatric/education”[MeSH] OR “Psychology/education”[MeSH] OR “Psychiatry/education”[MeSH] OR “medical education”[title/abstract] OR “nursing education”[title/abstract] OR curriculum[MeSH Terms] OR teaching[MeSH Terms]) 
Embase ('childhood adversity'/de OR 'adverse childhood event':ab OR 'adverse childhood experience':ab OR 'adverse childhood experiences':ab OR 'adverse experiences in childhood':ab OR 'adverse experiences in early childhood':ab OR 'adverse experiences in infancy':ab OR 'child adverse experiences':ab OR 'childhood adverse experience':ab OR 'childhood adversities':ab OR 'childhood adversity':ab OR 'deleterious childhood experiences':ab OR 'child abuse'/de OR 'abused child':ab OR 'child abuse':ab OR 'child maltreatment':ab OR 'child mistreatment':ab OR 'childhood abuse':ab OR 'childhood maltreatment':ab OR 'childhood mistreatment':ab OR 'pediatric abuse':ab OR 'pediatric abuse':ab OR 'pediatric maltreatment':ab OR 'trauma informed care'/exp OR 'toxic stress':ti,ab) AND ('medical education'/de OR 'area health education centers':ti,ab OR 'education, medical':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, continuing':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, graduate':ti,ab OR 'education, medical, undergraduate':ti,ab OR 'education, premedical':ti,ab OR 'education, public health professional':ti,ab OR 'fellowships and scholarships':ti,ab OR 'internship and residency':ti,ab OR 'medical education':ti,ab OR 'medical instruction':ti,ab OR 'medical program':ti,ab OR 'medical program':ti,ab OR 'medical teaching':ti,ab OR 'medical training':ti,ab OR 'training, medical':ti,ab OR 'nursing education'/de OR 'education, nursing':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, associate':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, baccalaureate':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, continuing':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, diploma programmes':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, diploma programs':ti,ab OR 'education, nursing, graduate':ti,ab OR 'faculty, nursing':ti,ab OR 'nurse education':ti,ab OR 'nursing education':ti,ab OR 'nursing education research':ti,ab OR 'nursing school':ti,ab OR 'schools, nursing':ti,ab OR 'pediatrics education'/exp OR 'social work education'/exp OR 'education, social work':ti,ab OR 'social work education':ti,ab OR 'psychology education'/exp OR 'psychiatry education'/exp OR 'curriculum'/mj OR 'competency-based education':ti,ab OR 'curriculum':ti,ab OR 'integrated curriculum':ti,ab OR 'mainstreaming (education)':ti,ab OR 'teaching'/mj OR 'computer-assisted instruction':ti,ab OR 'programmed instruction':ti,ab OR 'programmed instruction as topic':ti,ab OR 'programmed teaching':ti,ab OR 'teaching':ti,ab OR 'teaching aid':ti,ab OR 'teaching material':ti,ab OR 'teaching materials':ti,ab OR 'teaching method':ti,ab OR 'teaching program':ti,ab OR 'teaching program':ti,ab OR 'teaching, programmed':ti,ab) 
Web of Science (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “child abuse” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “trauma informed care” OR “toxic stress”) AND (“Education, Medical” OR “Medical education” OR “Education, Nursing” OR “Nursing education” OR “Pediatrics education” OR “Social Work education” OR “Social Work, Psychiatric/education” OR “Psychology education” OR “Psychiatry education” OR Curriculum OR teaching) 
CINAHL (MH “Adverse Childhood Experiences” OR MH “Child Abuse+” OR “Toxic stress” OR “Trauma informed care”) AND (MH “Education, Social Work” OR MH “Education, Medical+” OR MH “Education, Nursing+” OR MH “Psychiatry+/ED” OR MH “Pediatrics+/ED” OR MH “Psychology+/ED” OR MH “Curriculum+” OR MH “Curriculum Development”) 
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “child abuse” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “trauma informed care” OR “toxic stress”) AND (“Education, Medical” OR “Medical education” OR “Education, Nursing” OR “Nursing education” OR “Pediatrics education” OR “Social Work education” OR “Psychology education” OR “Psychiatry education” OR curriculum OR teaching) 
PsychInfo (“child abuse” OR “adverse childhood experiences” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment” OR “toxic stress” OR “trauma informed care”) AND (“medical education” OR “nursing education” OR “psychiatric training” OR “social work education” OR curriculum OR teaching) 
MedEdPORTAL (“adverse childhood experiences” OR “li” OR “trauma informed care” OR “child maltreatment” OR “childhood maltreatment”) AND (curriculum OR teaching OR education) 

ab, abstract; de, exact Emtree term, no explosion; exp, exact Emtree term exploded; MeSH, Medical Subject Headings; MH, Medical Subject Heading, search the exact CINAHL subject heading; ti, title.

To ensure completeness, we conducted an additional author-based search of PubMed, Web of Science, and Google Scholar to find resources by specific authors recommended by 4 national content experts in TIC education. A hand search was also conducted.

We used EndNote X9 to identify and remove duplicates. The remaining abstracts were exported to the review software Rayyan,33  where they were screened independently by 2 authors (S.H.J. and M.S.), 1 of whom is a research-trained TIC expert. Discrepancies were resolved in consultation with the medical librarian (J.R.). A study was eligible for the review if it (1) was a full-text article with a full abstract and not a case report; (2) was published in a peer-reviewed English-language journal; (3) described an appropriate learning intervention or curriculum for a health professional study population that addressed ACEs, TIC, child abuse, and child maltreatment; and (4) reported and assessed teaching and evaluation methods. The flowchart in Fig 1 summarizes the search and selection process.

FIGURE 1

Flowchart of review process and article identification documenting the process used for the systematic review. In the original search, 2264 studies were identified. After screening abstracts to eliminate duplicates, the full text of the remaining articles was reviewed to confirm eligibility. The most common reasons for exclusion of articles after full-text review were incorrect study population and/or incorrect study design. Fifty-one articles were included in the final qualitative synthesis.

FIGURE 1

Flowchart of review process and article identification documenting the process used for the systematic review. In the original search, 2264 studies were identified. After screening abstracts to eliminate duplicates, the full text of the remaining articles was reviewed to confirm eligibility. The most common reasons for exclusion of articles after full-text review were incorrect study population and/or incorrect study design. Fifty-one articles were included in the final qualitative synthesis.

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For each study that met the eligibility criteria, we completed a standardized data extraction form to record title, authors, year of publication, geographic location, study design, study population (type of health professional or learner), curriculum details (number and type of trainings) and curriculum evaluation. We used descriptive statistics to assess changes in teaching trends over time on the basis of content and learner type and organized studies by year of publication for an informal trend analysis.

One article was excluded because it could not be obtained, despite repeated interlibrary loan attempts.

The κ coefficient for this systematic review was 0.8567 (95% confidence interval, 0.7964–0.9169), suggesting a strong level of agreement between the 2 independent reviewers.

To create focus and efficiency in an in-depth curriculum analysis, we selected from the 51 studies a smaller subset that (1) addressed the broad topics of ACEs, TIC, and child maltreatment and (2) were published after the first Felitti et al1  study (1998), when ACEs were first defined. This selection process yielded 30 studies,2030,3452  which were then analyzed using the criteria described below (see Supplemental Fig 2). From among the 30 studies, we selected for deeper analysis 10 exemplar studies,2130  chosen for 2 reasons: (1) They met standards of high educational quality, applying accepted adult learning strategies,53  and 2) they collectively revealed diversity in learner types and formats and exemplified different educational strengths. The purpose of the detailed analysis of exemplars was to help other programs to select from well-designed curricular models in the published literature to build on the work of those who have preceded them.

The framework used for evaluation of curriculum quality is based on GNOME,54  a mnemonic for curriculum planning published in 1994 that aligns well with the 6 steps of curriculum development later developed by Kern et al.55  The GNOME acronym stands for 5 curricular elements: goals, needs, objectives, methods, and evaluation of learners and curriculum (details in Table 2 legend).

TABLE 2

Detailed Evaluation of 10 Exemplars of ACE/TIC Curricula Using GNOME and Kirkpatrick Frameworks

Learners and ActivityCurriculum Quality Scalea
Study Number, Source, Year 1.Goals(Address problem identified in literature, scope fits learners, setting)Needs(Needs assessment of learners drives choice of content, methods)Objectives(Specific, measurable, evaluable, targeted to learners)Methods(Objective based, learner centered, varied strategies, active, interactive, critical thinking)Learner Evaluation(Objective based, valid, reliable, feasible, feedback to learners)Curriculum Evaluation(Objective based, multiple data sources, Kirkpatrick’s 4 levels)
C1. Dubowitz et al, 201121  200 pediatrics MDs, NPs (18 practices); 4-h small-group session + boosters 3; improve KSA, comfort, practice (screening behaviors) 3; literature + individual surveys of previous training and experience 0; no mention 4; SEEK model: 4-h small-group discussion of 4 targeted problems; booster sessions every 6 mo; parent screening tool and handouts; social worker support 4; health professional questionnaire (5 vignettes); sr ksa and practice at 0, 6, 18, 36 mo; observation of 3 checkups at 0 vs 24 mo; record review of screening at 24 mo (vs baseline) 4; RCT (intervention vs control: increased practice-based competence); K1 and K4: none; K2: health professional questionnaire; K3: observation and record review 
C2. Feigelman et al, 201122  95 pediatrics residents; 8-h small-group discussion 3; improve KSA, screening, and follow-up; parent satisfaction 3; literature + individual surveys of hours of previous training and experience (No. of cases) 0; no mention 4; SEEK model: 8-h small-group discussion of 6 risk factors with cases and role plays; 1-h booster sessions every 6 mo; parent screening tool and handouts; social worker support 4; physician questionnaire (5 vignettes); SR KSA and practice at 0, 6, 18 mo; record review of screening and follow-up; parent-doctor interaction scale 4; RCT (intervention vs control: increased screening over 18 mo; charts large increase in screening frequency); K1: none; K2: physician questionnaire; K3: chart review; K4: parent satisfaction (mixed results) 
C3. Helitzer et al, 201123  27 primary care internal medicine and FM MDs, physician assistants, NPs; full-day training + 2 optional workshops 3; increase efficacy and effectiveness of communication training on screening, discussion of high-risk behaviors 1; collective needs assessment based on literature only 0, but implied by 21-item coding system 4; full-day training with lecture and taped SP interactions with feedback; 2 optional workshops on reflective writing for patients, and motivational interviewing 4; RIAS used to code patient-centered communications; assessment in videotaped SP interactions at baseline; audiotaped risk assessment of annual medical visits with real patients at 12 and 24 mo 4; RCT (intervention vs control: large increased communication skills and increased patient-centeredness scores) when groups evaluated immediately and at 6 and 18 m; K1: participant comment; K2 and K4: non; K3: videotapes of SP interactions and audiotapes of real patient risk assessment 
C4. Knox et al, 201324  89 MS1 students; 9-mo elective with adolescent focus 2; improve accuracy in identifying and making decisions about child maltreatment 4; literature-based self-assessment regarding preparation; precurriculum vignette scale evaluation 3; over 9 mo: didactics (8 h), small groups (4–8 h), patient observation (9 h), patient case (8 h) 3; SR perceived preparation precurriculum; SR 4-vignette scale with 2 yes/no questions: Was child maltreated? Would they report? 3; comparison study (n = 89 vs 49); K1, K3, and K4: none; K2: vignette scale SR evaluations: increased before vs after 
C5. Green et al, 201525  30 community MDs, FM residents; 6 h total in 2 sessions 3; improve patient-centered communication that addresses psychosocial topics and provides education and support 3; focus groups for pilot testing; literature review of collective needs 1; mentioned, not listed 4; theory-based, 6-h CME course adapted for inclusiveness, pilot testing with focus groups and postconference feedback; didactics, experiential exercises, progressive case study, worksheets, and practice tool 4; patient-centeredness score (RIAS) from 90 taped SP encounters (3 per participant) 4; RCT (immediate vs delayed, increased patient-centeredness scores; both groups significantly increased before and after patient-centeredness scores); K1: anecdotal participant feedback; K2 and K4: none; K3: 90 taped SP interviews with RIAS coding 
C6. McEvedy et al, 201726  170 mental health nurses and allied health professionals in 19 service settings; 2-d train-the-trainer course 3; teach participants to teach sensory modulation and TIC skills at their home settings to reduce aggression in patients 0; literature survey only about practice needs, not learner needs 4; detailed objectives for each module to facilitate future teaching 3; 6 sensory modulation and 8 TIC modules (45 min each): didactic, interactive, vignettes, video resource; manual, resources and slides for transfer of learning 1; primary outcome: knowledge and confidence to train their colleagues; no quantitative measures of KSA used; all SRs focused on train-the-trainer activities 3; K1: focus groups on effectiveness of train-the-trainer intervention with qualitative analysis; K2 and K3: none; K4: interview data at 6 mo on transfer of knowledge and practice to home setting; sustainability: 14 of 19 services received train-the-trainer intervention and 5 in planning; practice impact only anecdotal 
C7. Elisseou et al, 201927  148 MS1 students, 40 faculty; 2-h large- and small-group sessions 3; teach students specific language and behaviors within a trauma-informed physical examination framework 3; pilot study, presurvey of previous TIC knowledge and comfort; students thought TIC important, but had low level of familiarity 3; 4 written objectives, appropriate to MS1s 3; TIC overview read by students in advance; faculty guide read by faculty in advance; 1-h large-group didactics on TIC physical examination with SP demonstration; 1-h TIC physical examination hands-on practice with faculty supervision (taking vital signs on each other) 3; outcomes: TIC knowledge, confidence, application of principles; presurvey of knowledge, comfort; postsurvey of satisfaction, session efficacy; OSCE with evaluation rubric, feedback from faculty, and SPs 2; K1: short postsurvey satisfaction high (4.1 of 5.0); K2: short SR survey of KSA; K3: 28-min OSCE with SPs (no data reported); MEP publication 
C8. Palfrey et al, 201928  121 mental health professionals, students; 1-d workshop 3; increase SR confidence, awareness, and attitudes and reduce perceived barriers 4; encouraged self-assessment; focus groups; survey of previous training and experience: Only 8% were highly trained in TIC 0; no mention 4; excellent workshop developed using implementation science framework; didactic presentations and interactive activities; unfolding vignettes of patients with behavioral-emotional stress indicators; 10 evidence-based treatments 4; pre- and postsurveys of SR confidence, awareness, attitudes, and perceived barriers with quantitative and qualitative measures; postsurvey: qualitative analysis of TIC training; postsurvey at 12 mo for 43 participants: Change in assessment and treatment practice, further TIC training 4; K1: qualitative data, rated highly useful and relevant; K2: before to after significant change: increased SR KSA, decreased barriers; changes in practice planned; K3: 81% SR ↑ screening; 80% continued TIC training; K4: training model sustained with routine annual delivery to wider audiences 
C9. Schmitz et al, 201929  91 residents; 25-min online module during child advocacy rotation 3; define ACEs and their effects, use screening tools, and deliver sensitive care to patients 3; literature review (collective needs); presurvey: residents not confident using TIC; seldom used it 4; written objectives specifically related to ACGME competencies 3; good planning of online module: educator training, literature review, module development with stakeholder review, use of interactive software; frequent discussions of ACEs in clinical care (not measured) 2; SR survey of improved KSA and discussion with patients of ACEs, TIC, and resiliency: before, immediate after, 1–3 mo after; all SR measures, poor response rates 2; K1: no data on module completion; effectiveness rated by 4 of 91 residents; K2: SR of learning (32% response rate); K3: SR pre- and postsurvey of change in behaviors: ↑ discussion of ACEs with patients (12% response rate); MEP publication 
C10. Miller-Cribbs et al, 202030  38 FM residents years 1–4, 15 OT/PT students; 3–4-h SP-based session: 1 session for OT/PT students; 4 sessions over 4 y for residents 3; evaluate learner skills during simulations after PATH curriculum 0, no mention 4; 5 specific and focused objectives, linked to learner evaluations 4; PATH model: lecture, discussion, video demonstration, SP experiences, debriefing 4; videotaped SP encounters: Learners and SPs rated using standardized behavioral coding based on PATH model elements; trained coding team; single assessment of students; longitudinal assessment of residents: response at year 1 vs year 4, 100% vs 26% 2; K1: collected, not described; K2 and K4: none; K3: rating of SP video responses; year 1 (all learners): high levels of explaining, empathy, collaborative planning, stigma reduction; year 1 vs year 4: increased explaining ACEs, no change asking about ACEs, obtaining permission, stigma reduction; decreased empathy, collaborative planning 
Learners and ActivityCurriculum Quality Scalea
Study Number, Source, Year 1.Goals(Address problem identified in literature, scope fits learners, setting)Needs(Needs assessment of learners drives choice of content, methods)Objectives(Specific, measurable, evaluable, targeted to learners)Methods(Objective based, learner centered, varied strategies, active, interactive, critical thinking)Learner Evaluation(Objective based, valid, reliable, feasible, feedback to learners)Curriculum Evaluation(Objective based, multiple data sources, Kirkpatrick’s 4 levels)
C1. Dubowitz et al, 201121  200 pediatrics MDs, NPs (18 practices); 4-h small-group session + boosters 3; improve KSA, comfort, practice (screening behaviors) 3; literature + individual surveys of previous training and experience 0; no mention 4; SEEK model: 4-h small-group discussion of 4 targeted problems; booster sessions every 6 mo; parent screening tool and handouts; social worker support 4; health professional questionnaire (5 vignettes); sr ksa and practice at 0, 6, 18, 36 mo; observation of 3 checkups at 0 vs 24 mo; record review of screening at 24 mo (vs baseline) 4; RCT (intervention vs control: increased practice-based competence); K1 and K4: none; K2: health professional questionnaire; K3: observation and record review 
C2. Feigelman et al, 201122  95 pediatrics residents; 8-h small-group discussion 3; improve KSA, screening, and follow-up; parent satisfaction 3; literature + individual surveys of hours of previous training and experience (No. of cases) 0; no mention 4; SEEK model: 8-h small-group discussion of 6 risk factors with cases and role plays; 1-h booster sessions every 6 mo; parent screening tool and handouts; social worker support 4; physician questionnaire (5 vignettes); SR KSA and practice at 0, 6, 18 mo; record review of screening and follow-up; parent-doctor interaction scale 4; RCT (intervention vs control: increased screening over 18 mo; charts large increase in screening frequency); K1: none; K2: physician questionnaire; K3: chart review; K4: parent satisfaction (mixed results) 
C3. Helitzer et al, 201123  27 primary care internal medicine and FM MDs, physician assistants, NPs; full-day training + 2 optional workshops 3; increase efficacy and effectiveness of communication training on screening, discussion of high-risk behaviors 1; collective needs assessment based on literature only 0, but implied by 21-item coding system 4; full-day training with lecture and taped SP interactions with feedback; 2 optional workshops on reflective writing for patients, and motivational interviewing 4; RIAS used to code patient-centered communications; assessment in videotaped SP interactions at baseline; audiotaped risk assessment of annual medical visits with real patients at 12 and 24 mo 4; RCT (intervention vs control: large increased communication skills and increased patient-centeredness scores) when groups evaluated immediately and at 6 and 18 m; K1: participant comment; K2 and K4: non; K3: videotapes of SP interactions and audiotapes of real patient risk assessment 
C4. Knox et al, 201324  89 MS1 students; 9-mo elective with adolescent focus 2; improve accuracy in identifying and making decisions about child maltreatment 4; literature-based self-assessment regarding preparation; precurriculum vignette scale evaluation 3; over 9 mo: didactics (8 h), small groups (4–8 h), patient observation (9 h), patient case (8 h) 3; SR perceived preparation precurriculum; SR 4-vignette scale with 2 yes/no questions: Was child maltreated? Would they report? 3; comparison study (n = 89 vs 49); K1, K3, and K4: none; K2: vignette scale SR evaluations: increased before vs after 
C5. Green et al, 201525  30 community MDs, FM residents; 6 h total in 2 sessions 3; improve patient-centered communication that addresses psychosocial topics and provides education and support 3; focus groups for pilot testing; literature review of collective needs 1; mentioned, not listed 4; theory-based, 6-h CME course adapted for inclusiveness, pilot testing with focus groups and postconference feedback; didactics, experiential exercises, progressive case study, worksheets, and practice tool 4; patient-centeredness score (RIAS) from 90 taped SP encounters (3 per participant) 4; RCT (immediate vs delayed, increased patient-centeredness scores; both groups significantly increased before and after patient-centeredness scores); K1: anecdotal participant feedback; K2 and K4: none; K3: 90 taped SP interviews with RIAS coding 
C6. McEvedy et al, 201726  170 mental health nurses and allied health professionals in 19 service settings; 2-d train-the-trainer course 3; teach participants to teach sensory modulation and TIC skills at their home settings to reduce aggression in patients 0; literature survey only about practice needs, not learner needs 4; detailed objectives for each module to facilitate future teaching 3; 6 sensory modulation and 8 TIC modules (45 min each): didactic, interactive, vignettes, video resource; manual, resources and slides for transfer of learning 1; primary outcome: knowledge and confidence to train their colleagues; no quantitative measures of KSA used; all SRs focused on train-the-trainer activities 3; K1: focus groups on effectiveness of train-the-trainer intervention with qualitative analysis; K2 and K3: none; K4: interview data at 6 mo on transfer of knowledge and practice to home setting; sustainability: 14 of 19 services received train-the-trainer intervention and 5 in planning; practice impact only anecdotal 
C7. Elisseou et al, 201927  148 MS1 students, 40 faculty; 2-h large- and small-group sessions 3; teach students specific language and behaviors within a trauma-informed physical examination framework 3; pilot study, presurvey of previous TIC knowledge and comfort; students thought TIC important, but had low level of familiarity 3; 4 written objectives, appropriate to MS1s 3; TIC overview read by students in advance; faculty guide read by faculty in advance; 1-h large-group didactics on TIC physical examination with SP demonstration; 1-h TIC physical examination hands-on practice with faculty supervision (taking vital signs on each other) 3; outcomes: TIC knowledge, confidence, application of principles; presurvey of knowledge, comfort; postsurvey of satisfaction, session efficacy; OSCE with evaluation rubric, feedback from faculty, and SPs 2; K1: short postsurvey satisfaction high (4.1 of 5.0); K2: short SR survey of KSA; K3: 28-min OSCE with SPs (no data reported); MEP publication 
C8. Palfrey et al, 201928  121 mental health professionals, students; 1-d workshop 3; increase SR confidence, awareness, and attitudes and reduce perceived barriers 4; encouraged self-assessment; focus groups; survey of previous training and experience: Only 8% were highly trained in TIC 0; no mention 4; excellent workshop developed using implementation science framework; didactic presentations and interactive activities; unfolding vignettes of patients with behavioral-emotional stress indicators; 10 evidence-based treatments 4; pre- and postsurveys of SR confidence, awareness, attitudes, and perceived barriers with quantitative and qualitative measures; postsurvey: qualitative analysis of TIC training; postsurvey at 12 mo for 43 participants: Change in assessment and treatment practice, further TIC training 4; K1: qualitative data, rated highly useful and relevant; K2: before to after significant change: increased SR KSA, decreased barriers; changes in practice planned; K3: 81% SR ↑ screening; 80% continued TIC training; K4: training model sustained with routine annual delivery to wider audiences 
C9. Schmitz et al, 201929  91 residents; 25-min online module during child advocacy rotation 3; define ACEs and their effects, use screening tools, and deliver sensitive care to patients 3; literature review (collective needs); presurvey: residents not confident using TIC; seldom used it 4; written objectives specifically related to ACGME competencies 3; good planning of online module: educator training, literature review, module development with stakeholder review, use of interactive software; frequent discussions of ACEs in clinical care (not measured) 2; SR survey of improved KSA and discussion with patients of ACEs, TIC, and resiliency: before, immediate after, 1–3 mo after; all SR measures, poor response rates 2; K1: no data on module completion; effectiveness rated by 4 of 91 residents; K2: SR of learning (32% response rate); K3: SR pre- and postsurvey of change in behaviors: ↑ discussion of ACEs with patients (12% response rate); MEP publication 
C10. Miller-Cribbs et al, 202030  38 FM residents years 1–4, 15 OT/PT students; 3–4-h SP-based session: 1 session for OT/PT students; 4 sessions over 4 y for residents 3; evaluate learner skills during simulations after PATH curriculum 0, no mention 4; 5 specific and focused objectives, linked to learner evaluations 4; PATH model: lecture, discussion, video demonstration, SP experiences, debriefing 4; videotaped SP encounters: Learners and SPs rated using standardized behavioral coding based on PATH model elements; trained coding team; single assessment of students; longitudinal assessment of residents: response at year 1 vs year 4, 100% vs 26% 2; K1: collected, not described; K2 and K4: none; K3: rating of SP video responses; year 1 (all learners): high levels of explaining, empathy, collaborative planning, stigma reduction; year 1 vs year 4: increased explaining ACEs, no change asking about ACEs, obtaining permission, stigma reduction; decreased empathy, collaborative planning 

The GNOME acronym stands for 5 curricular elements: Goals are broad categories of activity that describe what learners should accomplish after exposure to the curriculum; needs identify what learners need to learn and society needs them to be able to do; objectives are evaluable behaviors that learners should demonstrate by end of the program; methods for teaching and learning are activities and readings designed to help learners to achieve objectives; and evaluation includes the processes and tools that measure (1) how well learners have accomplished targeted learning objectives and (2) how well the curriculum works.54  Kirkpatrick’s 4 levels of evaluation include K1, reaction (learner satisfaction, participation, completion); K2, learning (acquisition of KSA); K3, behavior (application of learning, eg, to patient care); and K4, results (impact on patients and society).57  ACGME, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education; CME, continuing medical education; FM, family medicine; KSA, knowledge, skills, attitudes; MD, medical doctor; MEP, MedEdPORTAL; MS1, medical school year 1; OSCE, objective structured clinical examinations; OT, occupational therapy; PATH, Professional ACEs-Informed Training for Health; PT, physical therapy; RIAS, Roter Interaction Analysis System; SEEK, Safe Environment for Every Kid; SP, simulated patient; SR, self-report.

a

0 = missing, 1 = low, 2 = moderate, 3 = high, and 4 = very high.

Our criteria for evaluating each of the 5 GNOME elements (see Table 2 column headings) were adapted from the Toolbox for Evaluating Educators,56  a resource developed by a task force of expert educators organized by the Association of American Medical Colleges. The toolbox contains evaluation criteria for 5 domains of educational activities, including curriculum development. The criteria for our analysis are derived from key components of curriculum development that are organized in the toolbox around Glassick’s criteria for educational excellence.56  For our purposes, 4 of Glassick’s 6 criteria were relevant to this study: clear goals, adequate preparation, appropriate methods, and significant results. In the area of significant results, we evaluated learner and curriculum evaluation methods using the Kirkpatrick hierarchical model,57  which categorizes evaluation at 4 levels: reaction, learning, behavior, and results (details in Table 2 legend). Although all 4 levels are important, achieving the higher levels of evaluation provides stronger evidence of curriculum quality.

The database searches yielded 2234 potential studies for inclusion in the review. Thirty additional studies2030,3452  were identified through a search of specific authors recommended by national experts in TIC education and a hand search (N = 2264). After elimination of duplicates, 1537 studies underwent title and abstract screening. Information from 79 studies was recorded on data abstraction forms. Of the 79 studies, 28 were excluded after full-text analysis, and 51 were included for final, qualitative synthesis (Fig 1).

Tables 3 and 4 summarize the reviewed studies, including authors and publication year, geographic location, primary focus, learner type, and a brief intervention description. From the English-language studies in the final review, 38 (74.5%) of the 51 studies originated from the United States, so cross-national comparisons were not attempted.

TABLE 3

Teaching Interventions for Medical Professionals Focused on Child Adversity, 1991–2021 (N = 34)

Source, YearCountryPrimary Focus (Secondary Focus)Targeted LearnersIntervention Description
Showers, 199159  United States Child abuse Emergency department physicians and professionals from medicine, psychology, nursing, public health, social work, law enforcement, and prosecution (n = 191) Self-instructional programsEducational instruction kit, 6 h to complete 
Berger et al, 200273  United States DV Residents (pediatric, medicine-pediatric) continuity clinic faculty, and certified-registered nurse practitioners (n = 84) 1 30-min didactic session, 4 iterations 
Henry et al, 200360  Japan Child abuse Nurses (nurse educators, clinicians, managers) (n = 234) 1-d program on nurses’ role in combating ACEs, formulating action plans 
Shefet et al, 200774  Israel DV Physicians in pediatrics, family medicine, geriatrics, internal medicine, (n = 150) 3 1-d workshops 
Agirtan et al, 200961  Turkey Child abuse, child neglect Professionals from medicine, psychology, nursing, public health, social work, law enforcement, and prosecution (n = 3570 over 4 y) Nationwide initiative: 10 train-the-trainer courses, 8 symposia; train selected multidisciplinary teams to foster regional collaborations; improve regional and national clinical practice goals; increase awareness 
McColgan et al, 201075  United States IPV Social work staff, attending pediatric physicians, and pediatric residents (n = 72) 2-h session (all professionals); 1-h grand rounds; 2 1-h “noon conference” talks1 25-min “preclinic talk”; 4-h problem-based small-group sessions + booster sessions every 6 mo 
Dubowitz et al, 201121  United States Child maltreatment (family stress, IPV, parental depression, and substance use disorder) Pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners (n = 200) 4-h problem-based small-group session + booster sessions 
Feigelman et al, 201122  United States TIC Pediatric residents (n = 95) 8-h case-based small-group discussion sessions + booster sessions 
Helitzer et al, 201523  United States ACEs Primary care providers (physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners) (n = 26) Full-day training, standardized patient interactions with feedback, and optional workshops on patient engagement 
Smeekens et al, 201162  Netherlands Child abuse Emergency department nurses (n = 38) 2-h e-learning program focused on recognition of child abuse 
Green et al, 201525  United States TIC Community physicians and family medicine residents (n = 30) 6-h curriculum, 2 sessions with exercises, case study 
Jelley et al, 201658  United States ACEs Internal medicine and family medicine residents and physicians, primary care–based psychologist, psychiatry-based counselor, social work faculty (n = 59) 3-h training session; 15-min patient visit; 5-min debriefing session 
Lee and Chou, 201663  Taiwan Child abuse Emergency department nurses (n = 80) 10 h of workshop training, with 5 2-h sessions conducted over 5 wk 
Froula et al, 201764  United States Child abuse Residents: 20 internal medicine-pediatrics or pediatrics and 14 family medicine (n = 34) 1 3-h workshop; content: (1) primary prevention, (2) secondary and tertiary prevention, and (3) evaluation and management of abusive trauma 
Lewis et al, 201776  United Kingdom DV General practitioners, nurses, administration/manager, and other (n = 88) 2-h session at lunchtime 
McEvedy et al, 201726  Australia TIC Mental health nurses and allied health professionals (n = 170) 2-d train-the-trainer sessions with 6–8 45-min learning modules on TIC and sensory modulation using vignettes and videos; mix of didactic and interactive activities, vignettes, and video resources 
Schiff et al, 201735  United States TIC (substance use disorder) Pediatric residents (n = 41) 2 45-min sessions during a month-long inpatient pediatrics rotation 
Weiss et al, 201736  United States TIC Nurses, physicians, social workers, child life specialists, researchers, educators, and administrators (n = 294) 1-h training on psychological impact of injury- and illness-related trauma, identification of trauma, responding to children exposed to traumatic events 
Wen et al, 201737  United States ACEs Internal medicine and family medicine residents (n = 59) 4-h simulation and video-based training program; conducting brief interventions, connecting patients with their experiences of ACEs 
Isobel and Delgado, 201838  Australia TIC Mental health nurses (n = 73) Communication workshop on impacts of trauma, translating TIC concepts into communication approaches; 8-h, 1-d skills-based program with didactic and practical components 
Sonney et al, 201865  United States Child abuse Trainees: 29 doctors of nurse practice, 14 social workers, 6 physician assistants, 17 family medicine residents, 3 not reported (n = 69). Facilitators: 7 doctors of nurse practice, 3 social workers, 3 physician assistants, 4 family medicine residents, 3 not reported (n = 20) 2-h workshop; trainees divided into interprofessional teams; 2 video vignettes; discussions using interprofessional faculty facilitators guide 
Dueweke et al, 201942  United States TIC Pediatric residents (n = 33) 2-h training focused on use of screening tool; pocket card with tool and referral resources 
Hoysted et al, 201943  New Zealand, Australia TIC (traumatic stress) Nurses, physicians (n = 71) 15-min, Web-based training program with a single module on pediatric medical traumatic stress and TIC 
Paek et al, 201966  South Korea Child abuse Emergency department nurses and physicians, emergency medical technicians, and other hospital staff (n = 1103) 2-h-long didactic lectures; held at 15 hospitals 
Palfrey et al, 201928  Australia TIC Nurses, psychologists, social workers, counselors, students/undergraduates, occupational therapists, psychiatrists, pediatricians (n = 113) 1-d workshop with progressive vignettes, 10 treatment methods, didactic and interactive approaches; didactic presentations and interactive approaches 
Schmitz et al, 201929  United States TIC, ACEs Pediatric residents (n = 91) 25-min self-directed online module on effects of ACEs and screening embedded in child advocacy rotation 
Chokshi et al, 2020a46  United States TIC, ACEs 28 pediatric residents, 2 medical students, 4 attending physicians, 1 fellow (n = 35) e-Modules with 4 components: 1 premodule and 3 case-based modules; part of 1-wk advocacy rotation 
Insetta and Christmas, 202077  United States IPV Year 1 internal medicine residents (n = 32) Required workshop; part 1: 1-h video, evidence-based didactic teaching, and case-based discussion; part 2: 90-min clinical applications with didactic teaching, role play, and debriefing 
Jee et al, 202020  United States TIC, ACEs Pediatric providers and staff: pediatricians, nurses, social workers, behavioral health clinicians, technicians, residents, and students (n = 52) Training on ACEs and toxic stress in pediatric primary care practice; clinic-wide meetings monthly; 4-h-long trainings 
König et al, 202067  Germany Child abuse Medical staff: physicians, psychotherapists, and nurses: first course (n = 262); second course (n = 190); third course (n = 243) RCTs: intervention group vs waitlist control group; 3 e-learning courses for health professionals to create flexible advanced training courses: 1. Child protection in medicine (30 h); 2. Safeguarding standards in institutions (35 h); 3. Course for managers (34 h) 
McBurnie et al, 202049  United States Child maltreatment Pediatric and medicine-pediatric interns (n = 28) 3-h multimodal workshop to increase comfort with suspected maltreatment cases; didactic session: approach to difficult conversations, reporting abuse, history and physical examination, documentation 
McNamara et al, 202152  United States TIC Providers and hospital and staff members: physicians at all levels (including pediatricians), midlevel providers, nurses, physical and occupational therapists, psychosocial support personnel, hospital staff members, and medical students (n = 318) 90-min workshop on safety, screening, understanding context, avoiding retraumatization, discharge planning; geared toward TIC in hospital-based pediatric care 
Miller-Cribbs et al, 202030  United States TIC, ACEs Family medicine/internal medicine residents in years 1–4 (n = 38); occupational therapy and physical therapy students (n = 15) Professional ACEs-Informed Training for Health; 3–4-h curriculum with lecture and discussion, video-based demonstration, simulation experience, and debriefing 
Shamaskin-Garroway et al, 202051  United States TIC, ACEs Internal medicine residents (n = 16); nurse practitioner students (n = 5) 5 1-h didactic sessions; 10-min group reflection on patient care observation and feedback 
Source, YearCountryPrimary Focus (Secondary Focus)Targeted LearnersIntervention Description
Showers, 199159  United States Child abuse Emergency department physicians and professionals from medicine, psychology, nursing, public health, social work, law enforcement, and prosecution (n = 191) Self-instructional programsEducational instruction kit, 6 h to complete 
Berger et al, 200273  United States DV Residents (pediatric, medicine-pediatric) continuity clinic faculty, and certified-registered nurse practitioners (n = 84) 1 30-min didactic session, 4 iterations 
Henry et al, 200360  Japan Child abuse Nurses (nurse educators, clinicians, managers) (n = 234) 1-d program on nurses’ role in combating ACEs, formulating action plans 
Shefet et al, 200774  Israel DV Physicians in pediatrics, family medicine, geriatrics, internal medicine, (n = 150) 3 1-d workshops 
Agirtan et al, 200961  Turkey Child abuse, child neglect Professionals from medicine, psychology, nursing, public health, social work, law enforcement, and prosecution (n = 3570 over 4 y) Nationwide initiative: 10 train-the-trainer courses, 8 symposia; train selected multidisciplinary teams to foster regional collaborations; improve regional and national clinical practice goals; increase awareness 
McColgan et al, 201075  United States IPV Social work staff, attending pediatric physicians, and pediatric residents (n = 72) 2-h session (all professionals); 1-h grand rounds; 2 1-h “noon conference” talks1 25-min “preclinic talk”; 4-h problem-based small-group sessions + booster sessions every 6 mo 
Dubowitz et al, 201121  United States Child maltreatment (family stress, IPV, parental depression, and substance use disorder) Pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners (n = 200) 4-h problem-based small-group session + booster sessions 
Feigelman et al, 201122  United States TIC Pediatric residents (n = 95) 8-h case-based small-group discussion sessions + booster sessions 
Helitzer et al, 201523  United States ACEs Primary care providers (physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners) (n = 26) Full-day training, standardized patient interactions with feedback, and optional workshops on patient engagement 
Smeekens et al, 201162  Netherlands Child abuse Emergency department nurses (n = 38) 2-h e-learning program focused on recognition of child abuse 
Green et al, 201525  United States TIC Community physicians and family medicine residents (n = 30) 6-h curriculum, 2 sessions with exercises, case study 
Jelley et al, 201658  United States ACEs Internal medicine and family medicine residents and physicians, primary care–based psychologist, psychiatry-based counselor, social work faculty (n = 59) 3-h training session; 15-min patient visit; 5-min debriefing session 
Lee and Chou, 201663  Taiwan Child abuse Emergency department nurses (n = 80) 10 h of workshop training, with 5 2-h sessions conducted over 5 wk 
Froula et al, 201764  United States Child abuse Residents: 20 internal medicine-pediatrics or pediatrics and 14 family medicine (n = 34) 1 3-h workshop; content: (1) primary prevention, (2) secondary and tertiary prevention, and (3) evaluation and management of abusive trauma 
Lewis et al, 201776  United Kingdom DV General practitioners, nurses, administration/manager, and other (n = 88) 2-h session at lunchtime 
McEvedy et al, 201726  Australia TIC Mental health nurses and allied health professionals (n = 170) 2-d train-the-trainer sessions with 6–8 45-min learning modules on TIC and sensory modulation using vignettes and videos; mix of didactic and interactive activities, vignettes, and video resources 
Schiff et al, 201735  United States TIC (substance use disorder) Pediatric residents (n = 41) 2 45-min sessions during a month-long inpatient pediatrics rotation 
Weiss et al, 201736  United States TIC Nurses, physicians, social workers, child life specialists, researchers, educators, and administrators (n = 294) 1-h training on psychological impact of injury- and illness-related trauma, identification of trauma, responding to children exposed to traumatic events 
Wen et al, 201737  United States ACEs Internal medicine and family medicine residents (n = 59) 4-h simulation and video-based training program; conducting brief interventions, connecting patients with their experiences of ACEs 
Isobel and Delgado, 201838  Australia TIC Mental health nurses (n = 73) Communication workshop on impacts of trauma, translating TIC concepts into communication approaches; 8-h, 1-d skills-based program with didactic and practical components 
Sonney et al, 201865  United States Child abuse Trainees: 29 doctors of nurse practice, 14 social workers, 6 physician assistants, 17 family medicine residents, 3 not reported (n = 69). Facilitators: 7 doctors of nurse practice, 3 social workers, 3 physician assistants, 4 family medicine residents, 3 not reported (n = 20) 2-h workshop; trainees divided into interprofessional teams; 2 video vignettes; discussions using interprofessional faculty facilitators guide 
Dueweke et al, 201942  United States TIC Pediatric residents (n = 33) 2-h training focused on use of screening tool; pocket card with tool and referral resources 
Hoysted et al, 201943  New Zealand, Australia TIC (traumatic stress) Nurses, physicians (n = 71) 15-min, Web-based training program with a single module on pediatric medical traumatic stress and TIC 
Paek et al, 201966  South Korea Child abuse Emergency department nurses and physicians, emergency medical technicians, and other hospital staff (n = 1103) 2-h-long didactic lectures; held at 15 hospitals 
Palfrey et al, 201928  Australia TIC Nurses, psychologists, social workers, counselors, students/undergraduates, occupational therapists, psychiatrists, pediatricians (n = 113) 1-d workshop with progressive vignettes, 10 treatment methods, didactic and interactive approaches; didactic presentations and interactive approaches 
Schmitz et al, 201929  United States TIC, ACEs Pediatric residents (n = 91) 25-min self-directed online module on effects of ACEs and screening embedded in child advocacy rotation 
Chokshi et al, 2020a46  United States TIC, ACEs 28 pediatric residents, 2 medical students, 4 attending physicians, 1 fellow (n = 35) e-Modules with 4 components: 1 premodule and 3 case-based modules; part of 1-wk advocacy rotation 
Insetta and Christmas, 202077  United States IPV Year 1 internal medicine residents (n = 32) Required workshop; part 1: 1-h video, evidence-based didactic teaching, and case-based discussion; part 2: 90-min clinical applications with didactic teaching, role play, and debriefing 
Jee et al, 202020  United States TIC, ACEs Pediatric providers and staff: pediatricians, nurses, social workers, behavioral health clinicians, technicians, residents, and students (n = 52) Training on ACEs and toxic stress in pediatric primary care practice; clinic-wide meetings monthly; 4-h-long trainings 
König et al, 202067  Germany Child abuse Medical staff: physicians, psychotherapists, and nurses: first course (n = 262); second course (n = 190); third course (n = 243) RCTs: intervention group vs waitlist control group; 3 e-learning courses for health professionals to create flexible advanced training courses: 1. Child protection in medicine (30 h); 2. Safeguarding standards in institutions (35 h); 3. Course for managers (34 h) 
McBurnie et al, 202049  United States Child maltreatment Pediatric and medicine-pediatric interns (n = 28) 3-h multimodal workshop to increase comfort with suspected maltreatment cases; didactic session: approach to difficult conversations, reporting abuse, history and physical examination, documentation 
McNamara et al, 202152  United States TIC Providers and hospital and staff members: physicians at all levels (including pediatricians), midlevel providers, nurses, physical and occupational therapists, psychosocial support personnel, hospital staff members, and medical students (n = 318) 90-min workshop on safety, screening, understanding context, avoiding retraumatization, discharge planning; geared toward TIC in hospital-based pediatric care 
Miller-Cribbs et al, 202030  United States TIC, ACEs Family medicine/internal medicine residents in years 1–4 (n = 38); occupational therapy and physical therapy students (n = 15) Professional ACEs-Informed Training for Health; 3–4-h curriculum with lecture and discussion, video-based demonstration, simulation experience, and debriefing 
Shamaskin-Garroway et al, 202051  United States TIC, ACEs Internal medicine residents (n = 16); nurse practitioner students (n = 5) 5 1-h didactic sessions; 10-min group reflection on patient care observation and feedback 

Medical professionals include physicians, residents, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, social workers, and allied health professionals from behavioral health, child life, and occupational therapy.

We divided learner types targeted by the curricula into 2 sets. Those for practicing medical professionals (34 studies, Table 3) included physicians, residents, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, social workers, and allied health professionals from behavioral health, child life, and occupational therapy. These teaching interventions were typically offered as optional single-day sessions, ranging from 1 to 8 hours. Curricula for students (17 studies, Table 4) included medical, nursing, and social work students. Student teaching interventions often included multisession curricula embedded in semester-long courses.

TABLE 4

Teaching Interventions for Medical, Nursing, and Social Work Students Focused on Child Adversity, 1979–2020 (n = 17)

Source, YearCountryPrimary Focus(Secondary Focus)Targeted LearnersIntervention Description
Bassoff et al, 197968  United States Child abuse Social work, medical, nursing, allied medical professions, and dental students (n = 20) 1 semester; didactic sessions plus experiential learning; major emphasis on role playing, field visits (families, hospital, family court) 
Hammond et al, 199369  United States Child abuse (child neglect) Nursing students (n = 219) Programmed instruction manual (self-paced) 
Ergonen et al, 200778  Turkey DV Medical students (n = 30) 2-h interactive DV course included discussions about pediatric and adult DV 
Knox et al, 201324  United States Child maltreatment Medical students (n = 40) Optional elective course: 20 h of didactics and case discussion; 2–4 h with inpatients; independent study; preparation of papers/presentations 
Metz et al, 201770  United States Child abuse Year 4 medical students (n = 14) 3.5-h workshop: simulation, debriefing, discussion and presentation of differential diagnosis, presentation of chest radiograph and discussion of head computed tomography scan and discussion; presentation of laboratory tests and representation of differential diagnosis; didactics 
Pelletier et al, 201734  United States Child maltreatment Medical students (n = 75) 9-mo elective course; 2-h didactics every other month (total of 8 h); small-group discussions of issues and cases on alternating months (total of 4–8 h); observation of a patient with focus on the impact of adverse life events (total of 9 h); study of a deidentified patient case of suspected child maltreatment (∼8 h) 
Elisseou et al, 201839  United States TIC Year 1 medical students (n = 35) 2-h workshop to create a trauma-informed environment; physical examination, with specific language and behaviors; large-group lecture with standardized patient; small groups: application of TIC principles 
Goldstein et al, 201840  United States TIC, ACEs Medical students (n = 20) 2-h modules over the course of 3 d (6 h total); lectures, discussions, and practice 
Taylor et al, 201871  United States Child abuse Nursing students (n = 119) 2-h training, required; online or group setting; video and facilitator lead discussion; optional additional 1 h for sex trafficking content 
Dynes et al, 201972  United States Child abuse (parental physical punishment) Year 1 medical students (n = 105) Child advocacy elective pass/fail course; 2-h physical punishment lecture; world views and position of United States relative to other nations; human rights implications; addressing corporal punishment with parents and caregivers in effective and culturally competent ways 
Elisseou et al, 201927  United States TIC Year 1 medical students (n = 148); faculty members (n = 40) 2-h course session: hour 1: large-group lecture on the trauma-informed physical examination; hour 2: practice trauma-informed physical examination skills with physician faculty feedback switch 
Evans et al, 201941  United States TIC, ACEs Medical students (n = 90) 1-h curriculum defining ACEs, effect of trauma on physical and mental conditions, specific language, and behaviors to enhance patients’ sense of safety, control, and trust 
Pletcher et al, 201944  United States TIC, ACEs Year 1 medical students (n = 535) Mandatory 3-h ACE workshop integrated into a health equity and social justice course; didactic lecture: 40-min introductory didactic presentation on the science and health consequences of ACEs, best practices for TI; 15-min TEDMED Talk; 90-min small-group case discussion led by facilitator 
Cannon et al, 202045  United States TIC, ACES Nursing students (n = 128) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration content embedded in 3-semester-long nursing courses at a large Midwestern university 
Chokshi et al, 2020b47  United States TIC Year 2 medical students (n = 179) 4-h TIC symposium: 3 interactive didactic sessions on connection between childhood trauma and health and TIC principles; facilitated small-group discussion to apply TIC principles to a patient case, with reflection and evaluation 
Kuhnly et al, 202048  United States TIC Nursing students (n = 54) 4 simulations: initial treatment and communication skills for patients and families experiencing a threatened abortion (miscarriage), preterm labor, and/or intrauterine fetal demise, as well as a perinatal nurse experiencing symptoms of secondary stress 
Onigu-Otite et al, 202050  United States ACEs (resilience) Year 1 medical students (n = 124) 1-h lecture viewed online delivering a condensed introduction to ACEs; option of expanding for 30-min active learning through case-based discussion 
Source, YearCountryPrimary Focus(Secondary Focus)Targeted LearnersIntervention Description
Bassoff et al, 197968  United States Child abuse Social work, medical, nursing, allied medical professions, and dental students (n = 20) 1 semester; didactic sessions plus experiential learning; major emphasis on role playing, field visits (families, hospital, family court) 
Hammond et al, 199369  United States Child abuse (child neglect) Nursing students (n = 219) Programmed instruction manual (self-paced) 
Ergonen et al, 200778  Turkey DV Medical students (n = 30) 2-h interactive DV course included discussions about pediatric and adult DV 
Knox et al, 201324  United States Child maltreatment Medical students (n = 40) Optional elective course: 20 h of didactics and case discussion; 2–4 h with inpatients; independent study; preparation of papers/presentations 
Metz et al, 201770  United States Child abuse Year 4 medical students (n = 14) 3.5-h workshop: simulation, debriefing, discussion and presentation of differential diagnosis, presentation of chest radiograph and discussion of head computed tomography scan and discussion; presentation of laboratory tests and representation of differential diagnosis; didactics 
Pelletier et al, 201734  United States Child maltreatment Medical students (n = 75) 9-mo elective course; 2-h didactics every other month (total of 8 h); small-group discussions of issues and cases on alternating months (total of 4–8 h); observation of a patient with focus on the impact of adverse life events (total of 9 h); study of a deidentified patient case of suspected child maltreatment (∼8 h) 
Elisseou et al, 201839  United States TIC Year 1 medical students (n = 35) 2-h workshop to create a trauma-informed environment; physical examination, with specific language and behaviors; large-group lecture with standardized patient; small groups: application of TIC principles 
Goldstein et al, 201840  United States TIC, ACEs Medical students (n = 20) 2-h modules over the course of 3 d (6 h total); lectures, discussions, and practice 
Taylor et al, 201871  United States Child abuse Nursing students (n = 119) 2-h training, required; online or group setting; video and facilitator lead discussion; optional additional 1 h for sex trafficking content 
Dynes et al, 201972  United States Child abuse (parental physical punishment) Year 1 medical students (n = 105) Child advocacy elective pass/fail course; 2-h physical punishment lecture; world views and position of United States relative to other nations; human rights implications; addressing corporal punishment with parents and caregivers in effective and culturally competent ways 
Elisseou et al, 201927  United States TIC Year 1 medical students (n = 148); faculty members (n = 40) 2-h course session: hour 1: large-group lecture on the trauma-informed physical examination; hour 2: practice trauma-informed physical examination skills with physician faculty feedback switch 
Evans et al, 201941  United States TIC, ACEs Medical students (n = 90) 1-h curriculum defining ACEs, effect of trauma on physical and mental conditions, specific language, and behaviors to enhance patients’ sense of safety, control, and trust 
Pletcher et al, 201944  United States TIC, ACEs Year 1 medical students (n = 535) Mandatory 3-h ACE workshop integrated into a health equity and social justice course; didactic lecture: 40-min introductory didactic presentation on the science and health consequences of ACEs, best practices for TI; 15-min TEDMED Talk; 90-min small-group case discussion led by facilitator 
Cannon et al, 202045  United States TIC, ACES Nursing students (n = 128) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration content embedded in 3-semester-long nursing courses at a large Midwestern university 
Chokshi et al, 2020b47  United States TIC Year 2 medical students (n = 179) 4-h TIC symposium: 3 interactive didactic sessions on connection between childhood trauma and health and TIC principles; facilitated small-group discussion to apply TIC principles to a patient case, with reflection and evaluation 
Kuhnly et al, 202048  United States TIC Nursing students (n = 54) 4 simulations: initial treatment and communication skills for patients and families experiencing a threatened abortion (miscarriage), preterm labor, and/or intrauterine fetal demise, as well as a perinatal nurse experiencing symptoms of secondary stress 
Onigu-Otite et al, 202050  United States ACEs (resilience) Year 1 medical students (n = 124) 1-h lecture viewed online delivering a condensed introduction to ACEs; option of expanding for 30-min active learning through case-based discussion 

Among the 51 publications included, we found 27 studies on ACEs/TIC,20,22,23,2530,3548,5052,58  14 on child abuse,5972  6 on domestic violence (DV)/intimate partner violence (IPV),7378  and 4 on child maltreatment.21,24,34,49  Terminology about child trauma has changed over the years. As shown in Tables 3 and 4, which are chronologically sorted, teaching about child trauma in earlier years appeared to be focused mainly on specific kinds of abuse rather than on the broader phenomenon of trauma (ACEs) and its care (TIC). The first publication defining ACEs was published in 1998,1  and since 2011, increasing numbers of studies focusing on children with ACEs have been published. TIC has also come into increasing use as a collective approach to care for children who have experienced abuse. The first study of a curriculum about TIC, ACEs, and/or child maltreatment in our review was published in 2011.21 

Figure 2 shows that overall, the number of publications about childhood trauma increased dramatically between 2010 and 2021, with the largest changes in curricula focused on ACEs and TIC. Before 2010, most studies focused on ≥1 narrow topics of child maltreatment (eg, child abuse, DV/IPV, parental physical punishment). In contrast, of the 43 studies published between 2010 and 2021, 31 were focused on teaching the broader topics of ACEs, TIC, and child maltreatment.2030,3452,58  These curricula for practicing health professionals became common after 2011 (28 of 34 studies),2023,25,26,2830,3538,42,43,46,49,51,52,58,6267,76,77  whereas those for students became frequent after 2017 (14 of 17 studies).24,27,34,3941,44,45,47,48,50,7072 

FIGURE 2

Change in focus of teaching interventions over time. Depicted are the changes in child adversity curricula over the period of the systematic review. In the early years, teaching typically centered on single types of maltreatment, such as child abuse or DV. Later, a broader approach to child adversity became the norm, reflecting research on ACEs1  and later, the development of TIC,14  which aims to address the needs of children with multiple kinds of adversity in environments characterized by pervasive maltreatment. CA/PPP, child abuse/parental physical punishment; CM, child maltreatment.

FIGURE 2

Change in focus of teaching interventions over time. Depicted are the changes in child adversity curricula over the period of the systematic review. In the early years, teaching typically centered on single types of maltreatment, such as child abuse or DV. Later, a broader approach to child adversity became the norm, reflecting research on ACEs1  and later, the development of TIC,14  which aims to address the needs of children with multiple kinds of adversity in environments characterized by pervasive maltreatment. CA/PPP, child abuse/parental physical punishment; CM, child maltreatment.

Close modal

Quality of 30 Selected Curricula

The subset of 30 curricula2030,3452  selected for analysis varied from a 30-minute online module, to 1- to 4-hour didactic/interactive sessions, to full-day workshops with simulation experiences, to multiple sessions (usually included in student courses). A tabular summary of this analysis can be found in Supplemental Fig 2. We reviewed these articles for potential focus on emerging topics related to child adversity and found 7 curricula that addressed resilience,29,40,4447,50  4 on secondary traumatic stress/compassion fatigue,20,29,45,48  and only 1 on broader social determinants of health.40 

Quality of 10 Exemplar Curricula

Overview

We selected 10 curricular exemplars2130  (see Table 2, studies numbered C1–C10 for cross reference) and evaluated them in more detail, with a focus on the quality of teaching and evaluation methods. Curriculum planning, as outlined in GNOME, was often not described in specific terms, but nearly all curricula authors proposed goals focused on patient-centered communications and screening, with some addressing patient follow-up for positive screens. Authors of 6 studies collected individual needs assessment data from learners through surveys or pilot studies. Objectives were generally omitted, except in studies published in MedEdPORTAL (which requires them). A particularly well-planned study (C8) used the methods of implementation science to develop both a TIC program and supportive ACE/TIC training activities.

A program’s selection of teaching and evaluation methods depended on not only context, particularly the time available to learners, but also availability of expert teachers, key resources, and stakeholder buy-in. Curricula with stronger teaching methods allowed enough learner time for experiential activities with simulated patients (SPs) (C3, C10). The strongest evaluation methods used the randomized controlled trial (RTC) design (C1–C3, C5), which usually required that the educators had sufficient access to learners to assess their skills in real or simulated practice settings, ideally over time. Student curricula seldom offered these opportunities.

Examples of High-Quality Teaching Methods

Robust curricula used a combination of didactic, interactive, and experiential activities, in keeping with the principles of adult learning. Didactic methods were typically interspersed with small group discussions, role plays, or practice exercises.

Slide presentations in didactic sessions were activated in many ways, such as progressive case studies to illustrate patient histories of trauma and typical behaviors (C5) or cases for practice with assessment tools (C1, C2). One excellent workshop (C8) taught with unfolding vignettes to illustrate patients with emotional stress indicators. Four curricula offered practice with tools to guide application of learning to patient care: a parent screening tool (C1, C2), an ACE screening tool and resilience questionnaire (C8), and the self-assessment/evaluation tools discussed below (C1–C4).

Small-group discussions were a standard component of all the curricula and provided opportunities for learner feedback. More interactive learning elicited strong positive learner response (C3, C6–C8).

Three curricula used SP care activities as a powerful tool to augment instruction (C3, C7, C10). Patient vignettes provided an alternative to SPs (C1, C2). Use of SPs for evaluation is discussed below; evaluation experiences at their best can be powerful teaching/learning experiences as well.

Examples of High-Quality Evaluation Methods

Learner and curriculum evaluation methods for the 10 exemplar studies varied in type and quality. These methods are rated and described in Table 2 in relation to Kirkpatrick’s hierarchical framework (K1–K4).

At level K1 (reaction), the most informative evaluation of learner reaction (C6) was focus groups with qualitative analysis. Four other studies used quantitative and/or qualitative survey data (C6–C9).

At level K2 (learning), 6 of the studies used self-report survey data (C1, C2, C4, C6–C9). Two curricula (C1, C2, which used the same teaching model) used a carefully designed, structured pre- and postquestionnaire with which learners self-assessed their knowledge, skills, and attitudes with reference to 5 vignettes linked to patient problems targeted by the curriculum. Four studies reported no K2 data (C3, C5, C6, C10), but 3 of these reported data at the higher K3 level.

At the important level K3 (behavior or application of learning), the exemplar studies used varied and often creative methods, including an objective structured clinical examination using SPs, rubric evaluation by faculty, and feedback (C7) and videotaped SP encounters using a standardized behavioral coding tool (C10). This ambitious study also attempted to compare learners at year 1 and year 4 of a longitudinal curriculum, but a poor response rate led to equivocal results. In studies C3 and C4, videotapes of SP encounters were analyzed by the rigorously developed Roter Interaction Analysis System23,25  to create a patient-centeredness score (C3, C5). Moving beyond simulation, 2 curricula evaluated observations or audiotapes of real patient encounters (C1, C3), and 2 also used chart reviews to track learners’ screening and follow-up for ACEs in practice (C1, C2). The most rigorous tool used for K3 curricular evaluation was the RCT. An intervention versus control group design in 3 studies was used to compare measurements longitudinally, demonstrating increases in practice-based competence (C1), screening frequency (C2), and patient-centeredness scores (C3). A fourth study used an RCT with immediate versus delayed intervention design and revealed pre- and postintervention increases in patient-centeredness scores both between and within groups (C5).

Level K4 (results) was addressed in only 2 studies. C2 used a parent-doctor interaction scale to measure parent satisfaction with care. C6 used interviews at 6 months after training to document delivery of a train-the-trainer intervention at participants’ home settings.

This systematic review includes 51 studies published between 1979 and 2021 that described curricula on ACEs, TIC, and child maltreatment taught to health care professionals and trainees. The curricula varied widely in breadth, duration, and quality. Three quarters of these studies were conducted in the United States. Our original hypothesis that few teaching interventions would be published was confirmed only for the years before 2011. Three studies matched criteria before 2001,59,68,69  2 studies matched criteria between 2002 and 2005,60,73  and 3 studies matched criteria between 2006 and 2009.61,74,78  However, eligible publications accelerated in the next decade. Twenty curricula about TIC/ACEs were taught to medical professionals after 2011,2023,25,26,2830,3538,42,43,46,49,51,52,58  and 10 curricula were taught to students after 2017.27,34,3941,44,45,47,48,50 

Terminology for ACEs changed considerably over time and may partly explain our failure to find many articles before 2000 that met our criteria. We found 20 studies focused on teaching about specific kinds of child trauma (eg, child abuse, DV/IPV, parental physical punishment).5978  Only after 2011 did studies focus on teaching broader principles of ACEs and TIC, reflecting publication of the ACE studies by Felitti and colleagues from 1998 through 2006.16 

Initially, studies of ACEs fell under the purview of adult medicine, and ACEs were described as a “chronic health morbidity”1  because Felitti’s early ACE studies were based on adult recall of experiences in childhood and health consequences later in life. These publications were groundbreaking because they led the field to understand that “trauma” in children extends beyond physical injury to psychological stress20  and that these stressors have lifelong effects. More inclusive perspectives on child trauma have developed along with growing recognition of the importance of social determinants of health to child and adult well-being.79,80 

Teaching interventions for health professionals were more likely to be optional workshops of 2 to 8 hours compared with multisession learning opportunities for students, often embedded within semester-long courses. This difference reflects the real-world challenge of finding time for continuing education for health professionals in busy clinical practice. The findings reinforce our previous work showing the challenges of teaching practitioners about TIC in clinical settings.20 

We identified 10 curricular exemplars2130  that represent a variety of instructional designs targeting students, residents, and practicing health professionals. These are potentially useful models that demonstrate excellence in curriculum planning (C5, C6, C8, C9), robust teaching methods (C1, C2, C4, C5, C7, C8), and/or development of strong evaluation tools (C1–C3, C5, C8, C10). Embedded in Table 2, readers will find several resources worth studying in-depth from the original publications.

In this rapidly changing educational field, some important new topics for teaching about child adversity were not fully covered in the curricula we reviewed. Looking forward, educators teaching about TIC are now beginning to focus not only on treating pathology but also on building resilience. Among the 51 studies, only 7 addressed this important topic.50  The AAP Pediatric Approach to Trauma, Treatment, and Resilience curriculum81  provides continuing medical education in multisession case-based interventions that show “how kids and caregivers can be supported to promote resilience through attachment, regulation, and efficacy.”16  Innovative programs by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network,82  as well as by the AAP,81  are teaching primary care providers to reconceive relational approaches to pediatric care to promote resilience and respond to trauma. Another perspective that is emerging in educational practice and in the literature is the concept of secondary traumatic stress, or compassion fatigue, which is reported by medical professionals who care for traumatized children.20  Two nursing curricula in our study address this issue in detail,45,48  along with a curriculum for pediatric residents by Jee et al20  and a curriculum for pediatricians by Schmitz et al.29 

The ACE studies of Felitti and colleagues heralded a new era in conceptualizing child adversity. Built on this foundation, newer interpretations of ACEs relate trauma to more broadly defined social determinants of health, such as food insecurity, community violence, poverty, housing instability, structural racism, environmental blight, and climate change. We found only 1 article that addressed social determinants of health,40  but more will follow. These newer approaches to framing the social circumstances that shape children’s health and drive health disparities are rapidly advancing the field of child adversity.83  We recommend that medical educators who teach about child trauma take a broad view, including the origins of trauma across a child’s life, and follow the impact of child trauma on health across the lifespan.

This systematic review reveals a steady growth in curricula that teach health professionals to understand and care for children who have experienced trauma. The identification of ACEs has deepened and broadened our understanding about how trauma affects humans in early development, when their vulnerability is greatest. It has also led us to focus our attention on the effects of social determinants of health on child development. These new insights are rapidly being incorporated into health professional training.

Emergence of the discipline of TIC has also been revolutionary, establishing best practices for child screening and treatment and identifying secondary traumatic stress in providers who treat child trauma. Effective teaching about TIC should be both patient and provider centered. Health professionals need to be mindful of how their own history and reactions to trauma affect the care they provide.84  Moreover, pediatric providers need to learn to exercise caution in screening children for ACEs, to avoid creating a self-fulfilling “expectancy effect” that labels a high-risk child as likely to have poor outcomes.85  Screening for ACEs, which was the focus of most of the curricula in our review, is critical,85,86  but curricula need to go farther to emphasize resilience training as well.87 

A strength of this study was that we conducted this systematic review with the guidance of a medical librarian and followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses guidelines. The use of searches unrestricted by publication date allowed us to track major changes between 1979 and 2021 in the way professionals are taught to deal with child trauma. We examined changes over time in the content of the curricula identified and evaluated their quality using well-established educational criteria.

Changes in the terminology for child trauma complicated our evaluation of trends in educational content over time and may have led to missed studies. Another limitation of this study is that we included only published English-language studies, most conducted in the United States, so generalizability of the review to other parts of the world is limited. Moreover, the explosion of academic publications in recent decades has hampered interpretation of frequency estimates as a marker of evolving interest in child trauma.

Finally, evaluation of educational curricula requires judgment in the application of best practice criteria; our quality assessments, although conducted by an educational veteran (C.D.B.), are intended to serve as a well-informed guide rather than as a definitive test of excellence. In addition, although we included MedEdPORTAL as a key resource for peer-reviewed publication of medical education curricula, many teaching interventions are not published. We found but omitted from the review many non–peer-reviewed and unpublished curricula on child trauma (eg, workshops at national meetings, conference proceedings, webinars, Web sites, and toolkits). Such curricula would provide a more complete picture of how child trauma is taught to medical professionals, but they are difficult to replicate without evaluation and peer review.

In a literature search over 5 decades, we found an emerging and, later, rapidly expanding interest in child adversity and since 1998, a broader emphasis on ACEs and TIC. Application of a critical framework to evaluate these published resources may encourage the development of new medical curricula on child trauma. Access to sound models should help educators to select well-designed, peer-reviewed curricula to build on the work of their predecessors. Good teaching, in turn, will give the next generation of health care professionals foundational knowledge to address ACEs proactively and implement effective TIC to improve the lives of children. In the future, exemplary curricula should address the broad health impacts of childhood trauma and teach proven strategies to proactively improve health, particularly by building children’s resilience. We need to develop providers who have the knowledge, attitudes, and skills required to identify and treat ACEs early in life, when further trauma may be prevented.

We gratefully acknowledge the advice of our content experts Moira Szilagyi, MD, PhD, Heather Forkey, MD, Jody Todd Manly, PhD, and Sheree Toth, PhD, as well as the content experts who they recommended and whose work we reviewed. We appreciate the helpful comments on our manuscript from Dr Todd Manly.

Ms Steen and Dr Jee conceptualized and designed the study, drafted the initial manuscript, and reviewed and revised the manuscript; Ms Raynor conceptualized and designed the study, performed the searches, reviewed methods, served as an independent reviewer to resolve differences in study selection criteria and data assessment, drafted the initial manuscript, and reviewed and revised the manuscript; Dr Baldwin performed evaluations of the curricula in all publications and contributed to the study design, data analysis, writing, critical review, and revision of the manuscript; and all authors approved the final manuscript as submitted and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

FUNDING: Supported in part by the New York State Children’s Environmental Health Center (Dr Jee) and New York State Children’s Environmental Health Center of Excellence (Grants Gateway ID: DOH01:CEHCE1-2017).

ACE

adverse childhood experience

DV

domestic violence

GNOME

goals, needs, objectives, methods, and evaluation of learners and curriculum

IPV

intimate partner violence

RCT

randomized controlled trial

SP

simulated patient

TIC

trauma-informed care

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Competing Interests

POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

Supplementary data