In today’s rapidly changing workplace, leaders are discovering that traditional management approaches may not be enough to support their teams effectively. With research showing that 70-90% of adults have experienced at least one traumatic event in their lifetime, and 30% have been exposed to four or more, it’s clear that trauma-informed leadership isn’t just a nice-to-have—it’s essential for creating resilient, high-performing teams.
Understanding the Hidden Impact of Trauma in the Workplace
Trauma extends far beyond dramatic, life-threatening events. It includes adverse childhood experiences like abuse and neglect, as well as adult experiences such as harassment, bullying, natural disasters, major illness, and collective traumas like pandemics. These experiences don’t stay locked away in our personal lives—they follow us into our workplaces, affecting how we respond to stress, change, and interpersonal relationships.
When employees have a history of adverse experiences, they may struggle with chronic stress that can persist for years. This can manifest as difficulty focusing on tasks, problems with decision-making, intrusive thoughts, and challenges with interpersonal connections including avoidance, withdrawal, fear, anxiety, and hypervigilance (Cady & Heykoop, 2024). For organizations, this translates to higher absenteeism, increased turnover, diminished work performance, and lower job satisfaction.
What Employees Really Think About Traditional Leadership
Research reveals some sobering truths about how employees with trauma histories perceive their leaders. Many view their managers as poor leaders during times of uncertainty and change, feeling that leaders only have “the illusion of control” (Cady & Heykoop, 2024). Without trauma-informed approaches, employees are more likely to experience feelings of mistreatment and organizational betrayal (Fisk & Daoust, 2025).
Employees consistently report that their leaders don’t create enough space to process emotions, fail to provide adequate support for middle managers, struggle to manage their own anxiety and stress responses, and lack awareness of cultural and gender issues related to trauma (Harris et al., 2024). These perceptions highlight a significant gap between traditional leadership approaches and what today’s workforce actually needs to thrive.
The Foundation of Trauma-Informed Leadership
Trauma-informed leadership acknowledges and accommodates the profound impact of trauma on employees. At its core, this approach prioritizes safety across all domains—physical, psychological, emotional, social, moral, and cultural. Leaders commit to “doing no harm” by recognizing the potential for employees to be retraumatized by real or perceived threats in their work environments (Fisk & Daoust, 2025).
Key features of trauma-informed leaders include:
- Authentic self-awareness and the ability to recognize signs of trauma responses in others
- Active listening and empathy with a willingness to validate employee experiences
- Emotional regulation and grounding techniques for themselves and their teams
- Transparency and trust-building through operational openness
- Power-sharing that enables empowered decision-making and collaboration
- Vulnerability that demonstrates it’s safe for others to be human too
Leadership Styles That Support Trauma-Informed Approaches
Certain leadership styles naturally align with trauma-informed principles. Authoritative leadership, which is collaborative and encourages autonomy while remaining non-judgmental and consistent, works particularly well. Democratic and participatory styles also support trauma-informed approaches by distributing responsibility and empowering employees in decision-making processes (Bloom, 2023).
Trauma-informed leadership overlaps significantly with transformational and servant leadership styles. Like transformational leadership, it seeks to build positive relationships and prioritize employee needs. Like servant leadership, it emphasizes leader humility and protecting employee safety while focusing on service to others (Fisk & Daoust, 2025).
Practical Implementation Strategies
Creating a trauma-informed workplace doesn’t require a complete organizational overhaul, but it does require intentional, sustained effort. Here are practical strategies leaders can implement:
Create Environmental Safety
Ensure adequate funding, space, staffing, and security. Establish clear organizational purpose and develop policies that support psychological safety.
Prioritize Employee Well-being
Implement flexible work arrangements, model self-care behaviors, and provide opportunities for stress reduction and grounding techniques. Actively promote mental health and wellness resources.
Develop Communication Channels
Create open, safe spaces for dialogue between leaders and employees as well as among team members. Regular check-ins and designated time for addressing concerns help build trust and transparency.
Invest in Training and Development
Leaders need training to recognize trauma, understand its effects, learn strategies to avoid retraumatization, and develop their own emotional regulation skills.
Building Resilient Followership
Trauma-informed leadership isn’t just about how leaders behave—it’s about creating conditions where followers can develop resilience and thrive. When employees feel safe, heard, and valued, they’re more likely to engage fully, take appropriate risks, provide honest feedback, and support their colleagues during challenging times.
Resilient followership emerges when team members feel psychologically safe enough to be vulnerable, make mistakes, and learn from them. This creates a positive cycle where employees become more adaptable, collaborative, and committed to organizational goals.
Overcoming Implementation Barriers
Organizations face several common barriers when implementing trauma-informed leadership approaches. These include siloed thinking that fails to view the organization as a complex, interconnected system, reactive rather than preventive approaches to employee well-being, and continued reliance on transactional, top-down authoritarian leadership styles (Bloom, 2023).
Success requires viewing employee well-being as an ongoing strategic goal rather than a problem to be solved. It also means moving away from purely directive, controlling, outcome-based approaches toward more relational, empowering leadership styles.
The Business Case for Change
The investment in trauma-informed leadership pays dividends. Organizations that embrace these approaches see improved performance, more positive job attitudes, higher resilience, increased perceptions of well-being and safety, fewer complaints, and reduced turnover. Research also shows increased customer satisfaction when employees feel supported and valued (Fisk & Daoust, 2025).
With trauma’s estimated annual cost in Europe at $581 billion and an average of 3.6 workdays lost per month in the American workforce, the financial argument for trauma-informed approaches is compelling (Mahon, 2021).
Moving Forward: A Call for Courageous Leadership
Implementing trauma-informed leadership requires courage—the courage to acknowledge that traditional approaches may not be serving our teams well, the courage to be vulnerable and authentic as leaders, and the courage to invest in long-term cultural change rather than quick fixes.
As leaders, we have an opportunity to break cycles of trauma by creating workplaces that heal rather than harm, that empower rather than diminish, and that recognize the full humanity of every team member. This isn’t just about being kind—it’s about being effective leaders who can build the resilient, adaptable teams our organizations need to thrive in an increasingly complex world.
The question isn’t whether trauma affects your workplace—it’s whether you’re prepared to lead in a way that acknowledges this reality and harnesses it as a source of strength, empathy, and connection.
References
Bloom, S. L. (2023). A biocratic paradigm: Exploring the complexity of trauma-informed leadership and creating presence. Behavioral Sciences, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13050355
Cady, P., & Heykoop, C. (2024). Strengthening health system leadership in practice. Healthcare Management Forum, 37(3), 128–132. https://doi.org/10.1177/08404704231209945
Claxton, S. (2023). Empowering employees through trauma-informed leadership. Leadership Excellence, 40(11), 13–17.
Eastmond, C., & Fernandes, S. (2024). Preventing health care worker burnout in primary care settings through the trauma-informed CARES leadership competency model. Healthcare Management Forum. https://doi.org/10.1177/08404704241297074
Fisk, G. M., & Daoust, L. E. (2025). Advancing a trauma-informed approach to leadership in the workplace: A conceptual review and theoretical extension. Psychology of Leaders and Leadership. https://doi.org/10.1037/mgr0000172
Harris, S. R., Amano, A., Winget, M., Skeff, K. M., & Brown-Johnson, C. G. (2024). Trauma-informed healthcare leadership? Evidence and opportunities from interviews with leaders during COVID-19. BMC Health Services Research, 24(1), 515. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-10946-9
Mahon, D. (2021). Trauma-informed servant leadership in health and social care settings. A Life in the Day, 25(3), 306–320. https://doi.org/10.1108/MHSI-05-2021-0023
Middleton, J., Harvey, S., & Esaki, N. (2015). Transformational leadership and organizational change: How do leaders approach trauma-informed organizational change…twice? Families in Society, 96(3), 155–163. https://doi.org/10.1606/1044-3894.2015.96.21

