Last updated: 16 March 2026

This page is intended for Day Services and includes information, reflections and presentations on physical and psychological safety taken originally from a Practice Forum in February 2026. It focuses on how Day Services can balance the need to create environments that are places of safety for everyone whilst being inclusive of those who are experiencing heightened emotions.

For more information on delivering effective Day Services, check out Homeless Link's co-created Day Service Principles.

On this page

  • Background
  • Being trauma-informed: how homelessness and trauma are connected, the impact for individuals and implications for services
  • Trauma-informed safety: how trauma-informed approaches apply to physical and psychological safety
  • Recorded presentations and downloads

Background

Day Services provide spaces for people who are experiencing homelessness to feel welcomed and connected, build trusting relationships and access the support and activities they need to move towards more positive futures.

The experience of becoming homeless is traumatic and many people have also experienced other forms of trauma. A key role of Day Services is to provide an environment where people can begin the process of moving forwards.

An important part of this is to create spaces where people feel physically and emotionally safe. Yet Day Services welcome a huge range of people and it can be challenging to balance the need for a calm, safe environment with the aim of including people who may have outbursts of anger or aggression for a full range of reasons.

A key starting point is to ensure that services have awareness of trauma and its impact on both attendees and staff.

Trauma-informed Day Services

Below is a brief introduction to a trauma-informed approach. You can read more detail on our pages  on trauma-informed care and by downloading our trauma-informed care framework.

Trauma and homelessness

Homelessness and trauma are closely connected. In the first place, the experience of becoming homeless is traumatic. Whilst this may seem self-evident, it is also backed up by research which has shown that people who have experienced homelessness exhibit the symptoms of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (Goodman et al, 1991).

In addition we know that many people experiencing homelessness and other forms of multiple disadvantage, have experienced trauma in their past (Oasis Community Housing, 2022; Lankelly Chase, 2015). In many cases this may complex trauma that results of ongoing abuse or traumatic events during childhood (Herman, 1992).

Finally, the experiences that people have whilst they are homeless may also be traumatic. Research by Crisis showed the extent to which people who are experiencing rough sleeping are victims or crime and abuse (Crisis, 2016).

The impact of trauma

Trauma can leave a lasting impact on the brain and body, particularly if that trauma takes place during childhood when the brain is still developing. This can affect language, emotion, memory and the autonomic nervous system; the individual may more frequently be tipped into “fight, flight or flop” mode with a heightened sense of danger. This is sometimes called toxic stress and can have a knock-on effect on a whole range of health outcomes for that individual.

Trauma also has significant psychological impacts perceptions of relationships, damaging self-esteem, making it difficult to trust and changing how people view authority. It can also lead to different coping mechanisms which can include unhealthy relationships or dependence on substances as well as challenges engaging with services and systems.

Whilst trauma will impact each person differently, it is important for Day Services to have a general awareness of how this may affect people who are attending.

Re-traumatisation

It is possible for people to experience re-traumatisation when they are in situations or locations that mimic the experience of their previous trauma. Homelessness services need to have an awareness of this as a key risk factor. Whilst each persons’ experiences and triggers may be different, there are common themes around noise, safety perception and also authority and institutional settings that can be particularly re-triggering for people.

Some examples of things that may be traumatising in a Day Service setting include:

  • Being asked personal questions by a stranger – can you take time to make someone feel comfortable and relaxed first?
  • Having to repeat information about traumatic events
  • Trying to follow rules, attend appointments, achieve specific actions while struggling to cope
  • Being in a building that feels institutional, among strangers, CCTV, unfamiliar noise and smells

A service that is trauma-informed:

  • Realises the impact of trauma and pathways for recovery
  • Recognises the signs and symptoms
  • Responds by fully integrating this knowledge into policies, procedures and practices
  • Resists re-traumatisation

Moving beyond trauma

It is possible for people to move forwards beyond trauma and one key role of homelessness services is to support this process. There are two key steps to moving forwards from trauma that are emphasised in a trauma-informed approach: creating physical and psychological safety and (re-) building control.

Trauma-informed safety

Considerations on how to apply trauma-informed safety to Day Services

1.Trauma-Awareness

  • Experience of trauma can make people feel physically and emotionally unsafe
  • How might the atmosphere within the service trigger a trauma-response?
  • How can the service adapt?
    • Friendly and inviting atmosphere
    • Avoid institutional feel
    • Focus on physical safety
    • Strong welcome into the service
    • Giving people time to settle in

2. Building physical and psychological safety

  • How can staff and volunteers enable trust to build?
  • How can relationships make people feel safe?
    • Fostering trust
    • Being transparent about limitations and what service can offer
    • Having clear boundaries
    • Being inclusive and aware of different experiences and needs

3. Re-building control

  • Strengths-based working to foster confidence and build self-efficacy/self-esteem
  • Involvement and co-production
  • Hearing feedback
  • People feeling a sense of ownership over the space
  • Improved confidence helps to build self-efficacy

Presentation

Slides from the Practice Forum in Feb 2026

Dr Emma Williamson recorded presentation

Angie Allgood, Director NewWay recorded conversation