University of Dundee, UK.
University of Dundee, UK.
Public Health. 2021 Apr;193:109-112. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2021.01.031. Epub 2021 Mar 26.
This article seeks to demonstrate the impact of distributing boxes of art resources and guided activities for vulnerable parents and infants to do together at home.
Designed in conjunction with the local arts centre and the psychology team at the University of Dundee, the art boxes were a response to planned face-to-face art interventions with families being cancelled due to COVID-19 restrictions. The aim of the art boxes is to encourage parents to make art together with their infants, fostering connection through playful, creative shared experiences. This research is currently being expanded to reach out to new families through referrals from health visitors, family nurses, and charity partners.
Data is being collected on how the art boxes are experienced by families using a mixed-methods approach. Families complete feedback cards (online, or using the stamped addressed card included in the box) rating their experience on quantitative scales and providing open comments. Visual data are gathered through parents sharing images with us on social media. An initial sample of 10 participants has been interviewed using semistructured interviews, allowing more in-depth qualitative understanding of their experiences. These preliminary findings are discussed here.
The thematic analysis of initial interviews provided a rich picture of the disconnection families experienced during lockdown, why art boxes may be beneficial to parental well-being, and the mechanisms by which the boxes may help to develop connections for the parent and infant together.
Preliminary findings show parents reporting feeling more confident and undertaking new activities which they plan to continue. This was of particular importance during lockdown where parents report opportunities for different experiences being more limited. Parent's describe positive playful interactions and reported improvements to their own well-being from doing creative activities together with their child. Analysis of these initial interviews gives a framework of barriers and supports to connection which highlights how art boxes can facilitate connectedness between dyads with the potential to strengthen attachments.
本文旨在展示向弱势父母分发艺术资源盒并指导他们在家中一起进行活动的影响。
与当地艺术中心和邓迪大学的心理学团队合作设计,这些艺术盒是对因 COVID-19 限制而取消的与家庭面对面艺术干预的回应。艺术盒的目的是鼓励父母与婴儿一起创作艺术,通过富有创意的共享体验建立联系。目前,这项研究正在通过健康访问者、家庭护士和慈善合作伙伴的转介,向新的家庭扩展。
正在使用混合方法收集有关家庭体验艺术盒的方式的数据。家庭通过在线或使用盒子中包含的已盖章的地址卡完成反馈卡,对其体验进行定量评分并提供开放式评论。通过父母在社交媒体上与我们分享图像来收集视觉数据。已经对 10 名参与者进行了初步访谈,采用半结构化访谈,更深入地了解他们的体验。这里讨论了这些初步发现。
初步访谈的主题分析提供了一幅丰富的画面,描绘了家庭在封锁期间经历的脱节,艺术盒如何有益于父母的幸福感,以及盒子如何帮助父母和婴儿共同建立联系的机制。
初步发现表明,父母报告说他们感到更加自信,并开始从事他们计划继续进行的新活动。这在封锁期间尤为重要,因为父母报告说不同体验的机会更加有限。父母描述了积极的游戏互动,并报告说与孩子一起进行创意活动改善了他们自己的幸福感。对这些初步访谈的分析提供了建立联系的障碍和支持的框架,突出了艺术盒如何促进对子的联系,并有可能加强依恋关系。