For Professionals: Trauma-Informed Training
Training That Transforms the Way We Support Survivors
At Adrienne Sharee Enterprise, we believe that how we respond to survivors of sexual violence shapes the path to healing. That’s why we’ve developed specialized courses for law enforcement, healthcare professionals, and community members—each designed to equip participants with the skills, awareness, and compassion needed to support survivors with care.
Each course is rooted in the H.E.A.R.T. Framework, a trauma-informed approach built on Highlight, Emphasize, Advance, Respond, and Teach. Whether you serve on the front lines or support behind the scenes, our trainings meet you where you are—and prepare you to show up differently.
Built on the H.E.A.R.T. Framework
All of our courses are grounded in the H.E.A.R.T. Framework—a powerful, trauma-informed structure that equips professionals and community members to better understand, respond to, and support survivors of sexual violence. This framework guides each training session, making the content both practical and impactful.
H – Highlight Prevalence and Impact
We begin by uncovering how widespread sexual violence is and how it affects survivors emotionally, physically, and socially. Understanding the scope helps reframe how we respond and advocate.
E – Emphasize Who It Happens To
Survivors come from every walk of life. This step challenges assumptions and emphasizes the importance of recognizing that sexual violence affects people of all ages, genders, races, abilities, and backgrounds.
A – Advance Prevention Strategies
Prevention is everyone’s responsibility. This part of the framework encourages proactive solutions—whether it’s through policy, culture shifts, or small everyday actions that foster safety and respect.
R – Respond with Healing and Support
The way we respond can either help or harm. This principle focuses on how to respond with empathy, clarity, and compassion to avoid retraumatization and build trust with survivors.
T – Teach Trauma-Informed Practices
True change happens when trauma-informed care becomes part of our systems and routines. This final step helps participants integrate trauma-awareness into daily practices, procedures, and communication.



