This follow-up episode continues the trauma-informed care conversation by centering accountability, power, and what actually needs to change inside ABA, not just what sounds good on paper.
We’re joined by Leslie Birdwhistell, LCSW and BCBA, a fierce advocate for affirming, accessible care. Leslie is also the founder of My ABA Tutor, an online program that supports caregivers in using practical ABA strategies to foster early language development.
Together, we explore where trauma-informed care collides with Applied Behavior Analysis and what it truly takes to support people with trauma histories without hiding behind ethics codes or claims of “effectiveness.” We break down what trauma-informed care looks like in real practice, challenge persistent myths about ABA in trauma contexts, and have an honest conversation about why working in isolation from mental health professionals puts clients at risk. This episode delivers hard truths, practical strategies, and a reframed way of thinking about power, safety, and real empowerment in the environments we create.
Do you have a question, comment, or a topic you would like us to discuss? Would you like to come talk with us?
Send us an email at: commpassionatebx@gmail.com
You can also find us on the web at: www.compassionatebx.com