Department of Applied Human Sciences, Concordia University, Canada.
Ingram School of Nursing, McGill University, McGill University Health Centre, Canada.
Public Health. 2021 Sep;198:245-251. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2021.07.004. Epub 2021 Sep 3.
This article presents the findings of a pilot study situated in a tertiary care cancer centre and examines the impact of an art therapy group on the experiences of women living through breast cancer.
The study design used in this study is a qualitative cross-case comparative case.
Ten women were interviewed about their experiences making art, many for the first time. Interviews were transcribed and analysed, along with the participants' artist statements.
Categories include the following: the significant benefits of art therapy on their sense of self-efficacy; the emotionally enhancing nature of making art for the first time; the power of their artwork to trigger insights about themselves (including subcategories of self-actualization, existential growth, and post-traumatic growth) or in communicating their experiences to loved ones; and how making art changed their worldview and life philosophies, creating doorways of possibilities.
This study suggests that art therapy provides a safe context to reflect on profound personal changes and to re-story losses following adversity through creative practices as a dimension of care.
本文介绍了一项位于三级癌症治疗中心的试点研究的结果,该研究考察了艺术治疗小组对乳腺癌患者经历的影响。
本研究采用定性跨案例比较案例设计。
10 名女性接受了关于她们创作艺术的经历的采访,其中许多人是第一次接受采访。对采访记录和参与者的艺术家陈述进行了转录和分析。
类别包括以下内容:艺术治疗对她们自我效能感的显著益处;首次创作艺术带来的情感提升;他们的艺术作品引发对自己的洞察力的力量(包括自我实现、存在性成长和创伤后成长的子类别)或在与亲人交流他们的经历;以及创作艺术如何改变他们的世界观和生活哲学,创造可能性的门户。
本研究表明,艺术治疗为通过创作实践在逆境后反思深刻的个人变化和重新讲述损失提供了一个安全的环境,这是关怀的一个维度。