Support for Organisations & Professionals
35 Years
Experience
across sectors
Quality, Care & Integrity
come first
HCPC-registered
Psychologists
Anti Oppressive
Practice
Relationships & collaboration
at the centre
35 Years
Experience
Quality, Care & Integrity
HCPC-registered
Anti Oppressive
Relationships
Collaboration
Trauma-informed support for organisations
We work with professionals and organisations in high-pressure environments to recognise the impact of trauma and embed practical staff support that strengthens people, systems, and long-term outcomes.
Distressing situations, increasing need, and constant pressure to make critical decisions without space to reflect all have an impact. Over time, systems can begin to prioritise output over sustainable wellbeing. As a result, the risk of burnout, vicarious trauma, empathic distress, and moral injury is high.
Without the right support, this doesn’t just affect individuals — it impacts team culture, decision-making, and how staff relate to people accessing services.
For many professionals, exposure to trauma is a core part of everyday work— its impact should not be unexpected, and requires structured support as part of routine practice.
Support designed around your organisation
We work alongside organisations to create space for reflection, strengthen leadership, and embed approaches that support both people and effective relational practice.
Our approach combines clinical expertise with a deep understanding of real-world working environments — creating support that is practical, relevant, and sustainable over time.
Trusted by teams working in complex environments
We support organisations across healthcare, education, housing and community services — where staff are regularly exposed to high levels of emotional demand or complex situations, by helping teams navigate complexity with confidence.
Including:
- Healthcare & NHS teams
- Social care & safeguarding services
- Education & SEND settings
- Charities & Voluntary sector services
- Leadership teams managing high-pressure environments


Our Staff Support Offers
Support your team to process the impact of their work and reflect on the psychological needs of the people they work with
Supervision Spaces
Ongoing supervision for professionals to reflect, develop, and maintain the highest standards of safe and effective practice.
Leadership Development
Supports managers and leaders to understand how trauma exposure impacts staff, teams, and organisational culture.
Workshops
Practical and engaging sessions designed to build understanding, professional confidence, and real-world application for your team.
Organisations we work with often see:
Improved staff wellbeing and retention
Robust staff support spaces helps people feel understood, reducing turnover and strengthening long-term team stability.
Confidence in managing complexity
Teams develop a deeper understanding of behaviour and risk, enabling clearer thinking and a better understanding of their responsibility within the wider system.
Stronger, more self-aware teams
Improved communication and shared contextual understanding helps teams stay grounded, connected, and effective in demanding environments.
Psychologically informed workplaces
Embedding trauma-informed approaches into systems and culture supports safer, more consistent, and effective ways of working.
More effective and sustainable performance
Teams are better equipped to manage pressure, maintain focus, and deliver high-quality work without compromising wellbeing.
Reduced burnout and emotional fatigue
Staff feel supported in processing challenging experiences, reducing strain and strengthening their ability to sustain their role.
Looking after the people who support others
Alongside our direct work with organisations, we offer trauma-focused therapy for individuals in support roles — whether you partner with us as an organisation or seek support independently.
Free Upcoming Workshops
Monday
20 Jul
9:30-10:30
Monday
20 Jul
9:30-10:30
Monday
20 Jul
10:45-11:45
Monday
20 Jul
10:45-11:45
Support your team with the right expertise
We can help you reflect on your needs and find a way forward in line with your personal or organisational values.
Support your team with the right psychological expertise
We can help you reflect on your needs and find a way forward in line with your personal or organisational values.
What is Trauma Informed Practice?
Trauma‑Informed Practice means recognising that people’s behaviours, emotions, and responses are often shaped by past experiences of stress or adversity, and approaching them with curiosity rather than judgement. It focuses on creating relationships and environments that feel safe, respectful, and empowering, where a person’s nervous system is supported rather than overwhelmed. In practice, this means working collaboratively, understanding the impact of trauma on the body and mind, and ensuring that support is delivered in ways that prioritise choice, dignity, and emotional safety.
What does a trauma‑exposed role mean?
A trauma‑exposed role involves working with children, adults, or communities who have experienced adversity, stress, or traumatic events. When we hear people’s stories, or build relationships with those experiencing trauma responses, we can be affected by the emotional and physiological impact of what they’re carrying. This is about how one person’s dysregulated nervous system can influence another’s — and how these patterns can ripple through whole teams or groups. These roles are emotionally demanding, and it is completely understandable to be impacted by the stories, behaviours, and situations you encounter.
Trauma doesn’t only live within individuals — it can also show up within organisations. High‑pressure environments, chronic understaffing, crisis‑driven cultures, and systems that rely on people continually “pushing through” can create conditions where stress becomes normalised and emotional overwhelm goes unacknowledged. Over time, this can lead to collective patterns of burnout, moral injury, hyper‑vigilance, vicarious trauma, compassion fatigue, empathic distress or emotional numbing across teams.
Having a strong scaffold of support is essential. This includes having space to process your experiences, reflect on the impact of the work, and co‑regulate with someone who can help you make sense of what you’re holding. Trauma‑informed support protects wellbeing and strengthens staff’s capacity to continue offering safe, compassionate care — both as an individual and within the wider systems you’re part of.
What is Vicarious Trauma
Vicarious trauma refers to the emotional and physiological impact of hearing about or witnessing other people’s trauma. Over time, the stories, emotions, and experiences you are exposed to can begin to shape your own worldview, sense of safety, and nervous system responses.
What is Compassion Fatigue
Compassion fatigue is the emotional exhaustion that can develop when you are consistently caring for or supporting others in distress. It often shows up as feeling drained, less able to empathise, or struggling to offer the same level of care you usually would.
What is Moral Injury
Moral injury occurs when you are placed in situations that conflict with your values, ethics, or sense of what is “right.” This can happen when organisational pressures, limited resources, or systemic constraints prevent you from acting in ways that align with your professional or personal integrity.
What is Empathic Distress
Empathic distress is the overwhelm that arises when you deeply feel or absorb another person’s emotional pain. Instead of empathy leading to connection, the intensity of what you’re sensing can leave you feeling flooded, anxious, or unable to regulate your own emotions.
What types of supervision do you offer for staff working in trauma exposed roles?
We offer Clinical Supervision, Professional Supervision and Reflective Practice. Clinical supervision focuses on casework, formulation, safeguarding and psychologically informed practice. Professional supervision supports role clarity, boundaries, decision‑making and reflective thinking. Reflective practice provides a facilitated space for staff to make sense of the emotional impact of the work, notice patterns, reconnect with values and explore what they need to remain sustained. All approaches are trauma‑informed and designed to support wellbeing and capacity. After we have met we will discuss with you the balance of supervision functions that you need and create a bespoke experience. For this reason we often use the overarching term ‘supervision’ to describe the service that we are offering.
Do you offer group supervision as well as individual supervision?
We provide individual supervision, group supervision for teams, and specialist supervision for managers. Sessions can be delivered online or in person, either as one‑off sessions or as part of an ongoing support package.
What is reflective practice, and how is it different from supervision?
Reflective practice focuses on the emotional and relational impact of the work rather than case management. It provides a structured space for staff to pause, think, process their experiences and understand how the work affects them. It complements supervision but serves a different purpose, centred on emotional processing, resilience and values‑led working. For some teams and organisations it can be helpful to integrate a team formulation element into their reflective practice provision. Team formulation is an opportunity to think about someone who is accessing the service and consider in more depth what has happened to them, how they have learnt to survive, what patterns might be repeating in the support relationship, and what their unmet needs may be. The focus is not on problem solving but on building awareness of the dynamic between service user and staff member.
Can you work with our team if staff are based in different locations?
Yes we are happy to support staff teams nationwide, either in person or online. Please get in contact to discuss your specific needs.
Can you help us embed trauma informed or psychologically informed practice across our organisation?
Through consultancy, we help organisations review systems and culture, identify strengths and gaps, and develop sustainable trauma‑informed and psychologically informed practices. This supports staff wellbeing, consistency and more effective service delivery.