Psychiatry Res. 2025 Oct 6;353:116757. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2025.116757. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Mass trauma events profoundly impact children’s psychological well-being, disrupting developmental processes and overwhelming existing systems. The October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, like the September 11 attack on New-York demonstrates the evolving, multi-layered impact of mass trauma events on a large population. The diverse and wide-ranging responses to these events underscore the urgent need for coordinated, evidence-based interventions that address individual, familial and social mental health needs as well as systemic vulnerabilities. This commentary is based on the session titled ‘How Do We Protect Our Children When Trauma Strikes?’ which held in PreAct conference in New York.
METHODS: This paper synthesizes clinical innovation, systemic coordination, and evidence-based approaches from several integrated trauma response programs: Schneider Children’s Medical Center’s multi-tiered interventions, Sheba Medical Center’s coordinated care model, and the Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) international evidence-based treatment implementation.
RESULTS: Successful trauma response required integration across three levels: (1) Clinical innovation, including rapid deployment services, specialized care for highly exposed populations (including hostage returnees), brief prevention protocols, and the use of tele-medicine; (2) Systems coordination linking health, education, and community sectors; and (3) Evidence-based interventions adapted for acute exposure to trauma, and to unconventional settings. Key findings include the effectiveness of early intervention models, the critical role of support systems (e.g., caregiver, community, health and education), and the importance of flexible, rapid evidence-based treatment models.
CONCLUSIONS: Protecting children during mass trauma demands clinical innovation along with highly coordinated systemic response across various levels of care. Interventions extend beyond traditional mental health services and settings. Successful models build on existing relationships and community strengths, prioritize immediate stabilization, early identification and prevention, and lay the foundation for long-term care. These approaches offer scalable frameworks for global application in humanitarian crises.
PMID:41075542 | DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2025.116757