Perkins Rosie, Ascenso Sara, Atkins Louise, Fancourt Daisy, Williamon Aaron
Centre for Performance Science, Royal College of Music, Prince Consort Road, London, SW7 2BS UK ; Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ UK.
Centre for Performance Science, Royal College of Music, Prince Consort Road, London, SW7 2BS UK.
Psychol Well Being. 2016;6(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s13612-016-0048-0. Epub 2016 Nov 29.
While music-making interventions are increasingly recognised as enhancing mental health, little is known of why music may engender such benefit. The objective of this article is to elucidate the features of a programme of group drumming known to enable mental health recovery.
Qualitative research was conducted with 39 mental health patients and carers who had demonstrated recovery following engagement with a programme of group djembe drumming in the UK. Data were collected through semi-structured individual interviews and focus group interviews designed to understand the connection between drumming and recovery and analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA).
Results revealed three overarching features of the drumming intervention: (1) the specific features of drumming, including drumming as a form of non-verbal communication, as a connection with life through rhythm, and as a grounding experience that both generates and liberates energy; (2) the specific features of the group, including the group as a space of connection in and through the rhythmic features of the drumming, as well as facilitating feelings of belonging, acceptance, safety and care, and new social interactions; (3) the specific features of the learning, including learning as an inclusive activity in which the concept of mistakes is dissolved and in which there is musical freedom, supported by an embodied learning process expedited by the musical facilitator.
The findings provide support for the conceptual notion of 'creative practice as mutual recovery', demonstrating that group drumming provides a creative and mutual learning space in which mental health recovery can take place.
虽然音乐创作干预措施越来越被认为有助于增进心理健康,但对于音乐为何能产生这种益处却知之甚少。本文的目的是阐明一项已知能促进心理健康恢复的团体击鼓项目的特点。
对39名心理健康患者及其护理人员进行了定性研究,这些人在参与了英国的一项杰姆贝鼓团体击鼓项目后已表现出康复。通过半结构化的个人访谈和焦点小组访谈收集数据,旨在了解击鼓与康复之间的联系,并使用解释现象学分析(IPA)进行分析。
结果揭示了击鼓干预的三个总体特点:(1)击鼓的具体特点,包括击鼓作为一种非语言交流形式,作为通过节奏与生活的联系,以及作为一种既能产生又能释放能量的扎根体验;(2)团体的具体特点,包括团体作为在击鼓的节奏特点中并通过其建立联系的空间,以及促进归属感、接纳感、安全感和关爱感,还有新的社交互动;(3)学习的具体特点,包括学习作为一种包容性活动,在其中错误的概念被消解,存在音乐自由,由音乐引导者加速的身体学习过程提供支持。
研究结果为“创造性实践即相互康复”的概念提供了支持,表明团体击鼓提供了一个创造性的相互学习空间,在其中可以实现心理健康的恢复。