ACHIEVE CE - EDUCATION SERVICES
This training equips healthcare providers to bridge the identification gap by transitioning from clinical intuition to an evidence-based assessment framework. Participants analyze the Action, Means, Purpose (AMP) model to differentiate trafficking from smuggling and review how reporting duties, documentation practices, and institutional response requirements may vary by state. The curriculum focuses on multifaceted screening tools, safe-separation protocols, and forensic documentation using ICD-10-CM coding. By evaluating systemic vulnerabilities and ethical tensions between autonomy and mandatory reporting, this course prepares practitioners to respond to suspected trafficking in a trauma-informed, survivor-centered, and legally aware manner. A significant practice gap exists in healthcare settings where clinicians miss many trafficking victims because assessment methods are inconsistent and often rely too heavily on unstructured judgment. While many providers recognize general red flags, specialized skills for safe separation, trauma-informed interviewing, objective documentation, and identifying markers of coercive control remain underutilized. In addition, state laws and facility requirements regarding reporting, signage, staff protections, and referral pathways may change over time and differ by jurisdiction. This course addresses these gaps by linking clinical evidence with practical response strategies, enabling providers to document suspected exploitation accurately, respect patient autonomy when legally appropriate, and respond in a manner that aligns with applicable state law and facility policy.
2.0 hrs
Self-study
$23