The Let Us Heal Trauma-Informed Medical Practice Series is designed as an advanced core curriculum for medical students at Harvard Medical School and other top-tier medical institutions. This series is meticulously aligned with, and exceeds, the graduation and board certification requirements set forth by Harvard Medical School, the Board of Medical Examiners, and leading international regulatory bodies including the AMA, GMC, and WMA.
Each course delivers rigorous, evidence-based content and survivor-centered, ethical, and legal frameworks that reflect the highest standards in medical education. By addressing trauma-informed clinical practice, advanced communication, documentation, cultural competency, and ethical leadership, this series ensures that medical students are not only fully prepared for graduation and licensing board exams but are also equipped to excel as leaders in the evolving landscape of global healthcare.
Integration of these courses positions academic Institutions and their graduates at the forefront of medical excellence, leadership, and trauma-informed care worldwide.

Foundational and advanced training for medical students in trauma-informed care, focusing on recognizing secondary re-traumatization in clinical settings. Students learn to identify institutional betrayal, procedural harm, and trauma activation during medical encounters, supported by the latest research in trauma neurobiology, communication, and harm reduction.

This course develops the ethical acumen of future physicians, addressing the prevention of systemic re-traumatization. Students explore how medical protocols, documentation, and organizational culture can inadvertently reinforce trauma, and learn to apply global medical ethics (AMA, GMC, WMA), navigate mandatory reporting, and advocate for institutional reform.

Students are trained in the skills of clinical rupture and repair, addressing patient distrust, mis attunement, and communication breakdowns. The curriculum includes trauma-informed communication models, the art of repair conversations, and best practices for apology, accountability, and survivor-centered documentation.

Foundational and advanced training for medical students in trauma-informed care, focusing on recognizing secondary re-traumatization in clinical settings. Students learn to identify institutional betrayal, procedural harm, and trauma activation during medical encounters, supported by the latest research in trauma neurobiology, communication, and harm reduction.

Medical students learn to prepare and support patients facing legal proceedings, media exposure, and digital harassment. The course integrates principles of legal medicine, cyberpsychology, and trauma-informed advocacy, equipping students to address trauma activation and narrative agency in public contexts.

This course addresses the intersection of trauma, culture, and systemic bias. Students learn to identify and mitigate epistemic injustice, credibility bias, and foster culturally responsive trauma care. The curriculum integrates research on health disparities, social determinants of health, and survivor-centered justice.
Academic and clinical value:
Fully aligned with and exceeds AMA, GMC, WMA, and Harvard Medical School educational standards
Evidence-based, survivor-informed, and legally relevant
Directly prepares students for graduation, board examinations, and ethical leadership in medicine
Positions graduates to lead trauma-informed transformation across medical, legal, and social systems

This foundational course introduces pre-medical students to the science of trauma, its neurobiological effects, and the concept of secondary victimization within healthcare systems. Students learn to recognize trauma responses, understand institutional betrayal, and appreciate the ethical implications of medical harm.
Key topics:
Neurobiology of trauma
Adaptive vs. maladaptive trauma responses
Secondary victimization and institutional betrayal
Ethical foundations in trauma-informed care
Meets all rigorous requirements:
Aligns with AAMC behavioral science and ethics competencies
Prepares students for MCAT content on psychological, social, and biological foundations of behavior

This course develops students’ skills in trauma-informed communication, emphasizing patient-centered interviewing, active listening, and trust-building. Students practice techniques for minimizing re-traumatization and supporting patient autonomy in clinical interactions.
Key topics:
Principles of trauma-informed communication
Patient-centered interviewing and active listening
Trust-building and empathy in healthcare
Recognizing and responding to trauma activation
Meets all rigorous requirements:
Fulfills AAMC communication and interpersonal skills competencies
Directly relevant to MCAT and medical school admissions criteria for professionalism and empathy

Students explore the ethical responsibilities of future physicians in preventing systemic harm and advocating for trauma-informed care. The course examines medical ethics, social determinants of health, and the role of advocacy in healthcare reform.
Key topics:
Medical ethics (autonomy, beneficence, justice, non-maleficence)
Social determinants of health and health disparities
Advocacy and systemic change in medicine
Ethical dilemmas in trauma care
Meets all rigorous requirements:
Satisfies AAMC ethics and social responsibility competencies
Prepares students for MCAT content on ethical and social dimensions of medicine

This course addresses the intersection of trauma, culture, and systemic bias. Students learn to identify and mitigate testimonial injustice, recognize credibility bias, and foster culturally responsive trauma care. The curriculum integrates research on health disparities and survivor-centered epistemic justice.
Key topics:
Cultural humility and trauma-informed practice
Epistemic injustice (Fricker, 2007; Kidd & Carel, 2017)
Addressing bias in assessment and care
Inclusive, survivor-centered medicine
Meets all rigorous requirements:
Fulfills AAMC cultural competency and diversity requirements
Supports MCAT content on social and cultural determinants of health

Students are introduced to trauma-informed documentation, medical record keeping, and advocacy for survivors in healthcare and legal systems. The course emphasizes accurate, sensitive, and ethical documentation practices that protect patient dignity and legal standing.
Key topics:
Principles of trauma-informed documentation
Recognizing and recording signs of trauma
Patient advocacy in healthcare and legal contexts
Legal and ethical considerations in medical record keeping
Meets all rigorous requirements:
Aligns with AAMC competencies in professionalism, ethics, and advocacy
Prepares students for medical school and MCAT scenarios involving documentation and patient advocacy
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