When Trauma Awareness Stops at the Hospital Door
Moving beyond the medical gaze to promote psychologically informed healthcare.
Posted April 13, 2026 | Reviewed by Devon Frye
While healthcare systems have made significant advances in recent years, they continue to trail behind in attending to psychological and emotional well-being. This gap affects not only patients living with a health condition but also the professionals tasked with their care. Despite clear evidence that chronic illness increases vulnerability to depression , anxiety , and post- traumatic stress , healthcare delivery remains largely governed by a narrow medical gaze —one that prioritises survival and symptom management while sidelining human experience.
The consequences are increasingly visible. Reports of burnout , moral injury , and compassion fatigue among healthcare staff now sit alongside growing concerns about disempowering and dehumanising patient care.
Routine practices, such as prolonged waiting, restrictive hospital gowns, and limited access to personal medical information, persist despite their well-documented links to helplessness and trauma-related distress. Hospital environments themselves often remain noisy, impersonal, and poorly aligned with recovery, psychological safety, and age-appropriate or neuro-affirmative care.
For children, the stakes are even higher. Medical procedures can disrupt essential developmental needs for safety, connection, and play. Practices such as clinical restraint may be experienced as deeply frightening, with lasting consequences for both children and their caregivers. Yet emotional distress is still frequently dismissed as inevitable or reframed as an issue of individual resilience .
A Systemic Problem, Not an Individual One
Too often, emotional support and compassionate communication is treated as a matter of personal “bedside manner” rather than a core component of quality care. In overstretched systems, it is framed as optional, something to be offered if time allows.
This view is a false economy. Neglecting psychological needs contributes to poorer adherence, missed appointments, maladaptive coping, impaired decision-making , medical error, and high levels of staff turnover and sickness absence. The cost is borne by both individuals and health systems already under strain.
My own experience of lifelong specialist cardiology care brings these issues into sharp focus. Born with a congenital heart condition, I’ve undergone repeated life-saving interventions from infancy. While medically successful, these experiences were overwhelmingly focused on physical survival, with little recognition of their psychological toll.
Some of my most enduring memories involve early separation from my mother during procedures. Since adolescence , I have lived with medically related post-traumatic stress—yet across decades of care, I have rarely been asked how I am coping or what might help. Instead, my distress has often been minimised—often with the assumption that “you must be used to this.”
Psychological Safety Starts with R.E.S.P.E.C.T.
If healthcare is to meet the complex needs of patients and staff alike, it must move beyond the medical gaze towards a psychologically informed approach. This shift underpins the development of the R.E.S.P.E.C.T. framework, an evidence-based model designed to embed psychological understanding into everyday healthcare practice.
The R.E.S.P.E.C.T. framework emphasises:
Psychological awareness cannot stop at the hospital door. Until psychological well-being is treated as foundational rather than supplementary, healthcare systems will continue to exacerbate distress, for patients and professionals alike, at a cost we can no longer afford to ignore.
Morton, L. (2025) Beyond the Medical Gaze: Practicing Psychologically Informed Healthcare , Oxford University Press, New York
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Liza Morton, Ph.D., is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Psychology and author of Beyond the Medical Gaze: Practicing Psychologically Informed Healthcare.
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This article is part of the Bringwise Psychology Journal — daily insights on human behavior, mental health, and personal growth.