Applied Intercultural Arts Research Graduate Interdisciplinary Program, Graduate College, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Fred Fox School of Music, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2020 May;68(5):1083-1089. doi: 10.1111/jgs.16418. Epub 2020 May 6.
With nearly 6 million people with dementia (PWD) in the United States, there is a critical need to build an interprofessional dementia workforce. Among the novel approaches to expanding a new workforce, music and the arts show promise for engaging students and trainees. To understand how and why the arts affect attitudes about and engagement with PWD, we examined a service-learning general education undergraduate course centering on music, filmmaking, and dementia.
The undergraduate course curriculum brought students to meet with PWD in dementia care settings, build personalized music playlists, coproduce short films about PWD, and write reflective essays. Two researchers independently completed inductive thematic analysis of the films, essays, and course evaluations. Differences were reconciled by consensus.
A total of 52 students from three classes completed the course; 24 (46%) were majoring in health sciences. Three key themes emerged: (1) Music helps students connect with people living with dementia in meaningful ways; (2) filmmaking offers students the opportunity to share unique, person-centered stories about dementia and music that empower the voices of PWD; and (3) reflective writing enables students to process new experiences and lessons learned. Unexpectedly, 29 students (56%) reported continued engagement with PWD in their careers, families, and communities after course completion.
This study identifies reproducible ways in which undergraduate arts courses thematically focused on dementia not only transform student perceptions about dementia but change the ways in which those students choose to engage with PWD following course completion. Arts and music departments may represent an untapped resource for building a geriatrics workforce. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:1083-1089, 2020.
美国有近 600 万痴呆症患者(PWD),因此迫切需要建立一支跨专业的痴呆症工作队伍。 在扩大新劳动力队伍的新方法中,音乐和艺术显示出吸引学生和学员的潜力。 为了了解艺术如何以及为何会影响人们对 PWD 的态度和参与度,我们研究了一门以音乐、电影制作和痴呆症为中心的服务学习本科通识教育课程。
本科课程将学生带到痴呆症护理环境中与 PWD 会面,建立个性化的音乐播放列表,共同制作有关 PWD 的短片,并撰写反思性文章。 两位研究人员独立对电影、文章和课程评估进行了归纳主题分析。 通过共识解决分歧。
共有来自三个班级的 52 名学生完成了该课程; 24 名(46%)主修健康科学。 出现了三个关键主题:(1)音乐帮助学生以有意义的方式与患有痴呆症的人建立联系; (2)电影制作为学生提供了分享有关痴呆症和音乐的独特,以个人为中心的故事的机会,从而赋予 PWD 的声音以力量; (3)反思性写作使学生能够处理新的经验和所学的教训。 出乎意料的是,29 名学生(56%)报告在课程结束后继续在其职业生涯,家庭和社区中与 PWD 保持联系。
这项研究确定了主题集中于痴呆症的本科艺术课程可以改变学生对痴呆症的看法,并且可以改变这些学生在课程结束后选择与 PWD 互动的方式。 艺术和音乐系可能是建立老年病学劳动力的未开发资源。 J Am Geriatr Soc 68:1083-1089,2020。