
Over the coming years, the healthcare system will face the issue of trauma on an unprecedented scale, among patients and healthcare staff alike.
We need to take immediate, concrete steps to establish a unified standard and adapt the system so that everyone can exercise their basic right to health.
System
Broader promotion o Trauma-Informed Care (TIC) in the healthcare system, building an organizationally trauma-sensitive and resilient infrastructure.
Patient
Creating a care experience grounded in trust, choice, and safety, while recognizing how trauma shapes people's engagement with the medical system
Practitioner
Supporting the well-being of care teams and equipping them with tools to manage secondary trauma and prevent burnout.
About the Forum
The Forum for Advancing a Trauma-Informed Healthcare System was established in June 2023. It currently brings together leading organizations from civil society, the healthcare system, and academia, with additional organizations in the process of joining.
The Forum works across several tracks to embed trauma-informed care principles throughout the healthcare system:
Promoting health, preventing illness, extending life expectancy, and improving quality of life.
Gender, cultural, civic, and national equity
Promoting safety and creating a protected environment
Building trust and transparency in decision-making
Collaboration, solidarity, and mutual support
Emphasis on empowerment and providing choice
A focus on strengths, resilience, health, and hope

We aim to partner with a range of organizations and stakeholders, including healthcare providers, patients, health institutions, and government bodies.
All of these are essential to creating and sustaining the change our system needs.
Our Vision
According to the World Health Organization, more than 70% of people experience at least one significant traumatic event in their lifetime. Trauma profoundly affects both physical and mental health: it increases the risk of illness, shortens life expectancy, and alters patterns of thinking, communication, and behavior.
Among people with a history of trauma, some will avoid seeking healthcare altogether, while others will seek it excessively. When a patient with a history of trauma encounters healthcare providers who are not trauma-informed, it can trigger feelings of anxiety, disappointment, and misunderstanding on both sides and, as a result, harm the patient's health and discourage follow-up care and preventive medicine. A trauma-informed encounter, on the other hand, can foster a sense of satisfaction and empowerment, promoting better health outcomes and reducing staff burnout.
Trauma-Informed Care is an approach that assumes most people have experienced traumatic events and accounts for the physical, psychological, and behavioral impact of those experiences. A trauma-informed system actively works to create a safe environment for everyone within it, reduce the re-triggering of trauma during care encounters, and prevent secondary traumatization and burnout among staff.
The Forum for Advancing a Trauma-Informed Healthcare System is committed to promoting a healthcare system that is adapted to and operates according to the principles of Trauma-Informed Care:
Safety
Ensuring both physical and psychological safety for staff and individuals seeking services.
Trustworthiness and Transparency
Building trust through clear, consistent, and honest communication, ensuring that operations are open and understandable.
Peer Support and Mutual Self-Help
Using shared experiences of trauma and recovery to build trust, ensure safety, and foster connection.
Collaboration and Mutuality
Minimizing power differentials between staff and service users and emphasizing that healing occurs through shared decision-making.
Empowerment, Voice, and Choice
Focusing on validating strengths, fostering resilience, and enabling individuals to make decisions about their treatment and care.
Cultural, Historical, and Gender Issues
Moving beyond cultural stereotypes, recognizing historical trauma, and providing culturally responsive services that affirm individual identity.
The Forum will partner with a range of organizations and stakeholders — including healthcare providers, patients, health institutions, and government bodies.
All of these are essential to creating and sustaining the change our system needs.
The right to health is one of the most fundamental human rights. Only a healthcare system adapted to the effects of trauma can make that right a reality for everyone.
Member organizations
The cross-sector partnership is composed of organizations from the civil and public sectors, working together to achieve the shared goal of a trauma-informed healthcare system.

Forum staff

Attorney Hila Tena-Gilad
Director of Forum Mabat
An attorney with over 25 years of legal experience, during which she led the field of human rights in international law at the Ministry of Justice.
She holds an LL.B. from the Hebrew University and a Master’s degree in Natural Resources and Environmental Management from the University of Haifa. She also serves as an external lecturer at Ben-Gurion University.

Yael Basford
Content creator, linguistic editor and translator
Has an MA in Clinical Psychology, writes content and User Experience dialogs, and is an editor and Hebrew-English-Hebrew translator.

Dafna Armon, M.D
Founder and Chairwoman
A psychiatrist with a Bachelor's degree in Psychology and Biology, a Master's degree in Neurobiology, and a Medical Degree from Hebrew University. She has previously worked at the Lotem Center, which specializes in treating victims of sexual trauma at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, and at the Salit Center for women involved in prostitution. She currently serves as the Treasurer for the Israeli Society for Sexual Trauma Treatment & Prevention (ISTT).

Daniella Ganbar
Resource Development Consultant
Holds an MA in International Development with broad experience in resource development, fundraising, impact evaluation, and strategic writing.
Further Reading
Here you will find links to relevant resources and additional reading on Trauma-Informed Care, as well as research on trauma and its effects more broadly.

Contact
We welcome inquiries via the form below- questions, comments, or thoughts on Trauma-Informed Care.
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