Freeman Health System Case Study

An Equity-Centered Approach to Addressing Vicarious Trauma

Client Overview

Organization: Freeman Health System
Sector: Healthcare
Training: Equity-Centered Vicarious Trauma Workshop
Participants: 11 healthcare professionals

Healthcare professionals are routinely exposed to high-stress, emotionally intense environments that increase the risk of vicarious trauma and secondary traumatic stress. Freeman Health System partnered with the Community Health Commission of Missouri (CHCM) to provide staff with practical, equity-centered tools to recognize, understand, and respond to these impacts—both individually and collectively.

The Challenge

Healthcare staff often prioritize patient care over their own well-being, leaving limited space to acknowledge or address the cumulative effects of trauma exposure. Freeman Health System sought a training that would:

Increase understanding of vicarious trauma and secondary traumatic stress

Normalize conversations around stress, burnout, and emotional impact

Equip staff with realistic, actionable strategies they could apply immediately

Support a healthier, more trauma-responsive workplace culture

The Approach

Freeman Health System partnered with CHCM as part of its ongoing work through the Missouri Model for Equity-Centered, Trauma-Informed Healthcare, a comprehensive framework that supports organizations in building trauma-informed systems, practices, and cultures over time.

As part of this broader effort, CHCM facilitated an equity-centered Vicarious Trauma Workshop designed specifically for healthcare settings. This session served as one step in a larger journey, helping staff build shared language, deepen awareness, and begin applying practical strategies in their day-to-day work.

Core learning objectives included:

  • Understanding vicarious trauma
  • Recognizing signs and impacts of secondary traumatic stress
  • Reflecting on personal and professional experiences
  • Practicing and applying realistic coping and support strategies

By embedding this training within the Missouri Model, Freeman Health System is not only supporting individual staff well-being, but also advancing long-term, system-wide change.

Results & Impact

Strong satisfaction and facilitator credibility

Training rated 4.82 out of 5

Facilitator rated 4.91 out of 5

Significant knowledge gains

Participants’ knowledge of vicarious trauma and secondary traumatic stress increased by 44.4% following the workshop

Universal recommendation

100% of participants said they would recommend the training to a colleague or others within their organization

Participant Takeaways

Participants consistently highlighted the value of practical, realistic tools they could sustain over time:

“Practical strategies to assist myself and colleagues with this.”
“To take care of myself before I can take care of patients.”
“To have a personal care plan that you can actually commit to following.”

Behavior Change & Organizational Application

Following the training, participants identified concrete changes they planned to make, including:

  • Creating peer support relationships to share stressors
  • Setting clearer boundaries between work and home life
  • Making intentional time for self-care and recovery

Participants also shared ways they could apply the training at an organizational level:

  • Being more aware of colleagues’ needs and stress signals
  • Encouraging open, honest conversations about trauma and well-being
  • Supporting a more trauma-responsive team culture

Why It Matters

This engagement shows how trauma-informed approaches can move beyond awareness to practical, sustainable change in healthcare environments. By helping staff recognize stress and burnout as signals of how systems are functioning—not just individual challenges—Freeman Health System is building a stronger foundation for both staff well-being and performance.

Through this work, staff gained tools to support themselves and one another, while the organization continues progressing toward a more trauma-responsive culture that strengthens retention, teamwork, and quality of care over time.

Next Steps

Freeman Health System will continue advancing this work through the Missouri Model, building from increased staff awareness to sustained, system-level change.

Next steps include:

  • Expanding training across teams
  • Equipping managers with practical tools to support staff in real time
  • Creating space for reflection and peer support

Over time, these efforts will be integrated into daily workflows and leadership practices to strengthen staff well-being, retention, and quality of care

Start Here

Support your staff. Strengthen patient care.

Start with a conversation about what this could look like in your organization.