Prepare
Key Principle: Take time to prepare before sharing your story
If a journalist has approached you for a story, you may wish to ask
- Why are they doing this story?
- Why do they want to talk to you?
- Who else will they be talking to?
- What is the angle of their story, and where do you fit into that?
- (If it is for TV or radio) Will the interview be live or prerecorded?
- How will the story be published (newspaper, online or on TV or radio)?
- Do they know when the story will be published or aired?
What is trauma?
Trauma is the psychological, physical, social, emotional, cultural and/or spiritual harm caused by exposure to an event, or series of events that are emotionally disturbing or life-threatening.
It impacts an individual’s sense of self, safety, social connection and ways of coping. For this purpose, ‘trauma’ can be defined both in terms of an event/s causing harm, and the harm that exposure to that event/s causes. Paton, A., et al. (2023). Minimum Practice Standards: Specialist and Community Support Services Responding to Child Sexual Abuse. Canberra: National Office for Child Safety.
What is trauma-informed practice?
Trauma-informed practice is framed within several core principles: safety, trust, choice, collaboration, empowerment and respect for diversity. Based on the foundational principle of ‘Do No Harm’,
it is a practice that everyone can adopt, rather than a form of ‘treatment’.
Putting these principles into action for journalists, trauma-informed practice:
- Understands how stress and trauma can affect the brain and the body, and that ‘symptoms’ can be a way of coping.
- Considers what has happened to the person (not what is ‘wrong’ with the person).
- Is sensitive to the victim and survivor's experience when conducting the reporting process.
- Collaborates with the victim and survivor as an expert in their own experience.
Based on Blue Knot Foundation: Becoming Trauma Informed – Services.