Anglia Ruskin University, Faculty of Health, Education, Medicine and Social Care, Chelmsford, Essex, UK.
Arts Health. 2024 Oct;16(3):227-248. doi: 10.1080/17533015.2023.2237994. Epub 2023 Jul 18.
: Groups at high risk of severe illness/death from COVID-19 (older people and those identified as clinically extremely vulnerable: CEV) experienced increased restrictions, poor mental health and loneliness during the first UK lockdown. : Seventeen older adults, eight CEV adults, one parent of a CEV child, and two family carers of CEV adults, shared their experiences of the first UK lockdown through various media: written reflections, interviews, poetry, videos, photographs, and visual artwork. : Through a positive psychology lens, five themes were identified: experiencing loss; community and connection; finding joy, hope and optimism; adapting to change; and sense- and meaning-making. : High-risk groups fostered wellbeing and flourishing and formed a sense of coherence in a time of great loss. Engagement with artistic, creative, and cultural activities facilitated this. The arts not only provided a creative means of collecting data but was also identified as a central thread in the findings.
: 在英国首次封锁期间,COVID-19 重病/死亡风险较高的群体(老年人和被认为临床极为脆弱的人:CEV)经历了更多的限制、较差的心理健康和孤独感。: 17 名老年人、8 名 CEV 成年人、1 名 CEV 儿童的父母和 2 名 CEV 成年人的家庭照顾者通过各种媒体分享了他们在英国首次封锁期间的经历:书面反思、访谈、诗歌、视频、照片和视觉艺术。: 通过积极心理学的视角,确定了五个主题:体验失去;社区和联系;寻找快乐、希望和乐观;适应变化;以及感知和意义建构。: 高风险群体在巨大的损失中培养了幸福感和繁荣感,并形成了一种一致性感。参与艺术、创意和文化活动促进了这一点。艺术不仅提供了一种创造性的数据收集方式,而且被确定为研究结果的一个核心线索。