Arts and Health Promotion : Tools and Bridges for Practice, Research, and Social Transformation.
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , , |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing AG,
2021.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Contents
- About the Editors
- Contributors
- Part I: Introduction
- Chapter 1: Exploring the Potential for the Arts to Promote Health and Social Justice
- 1.1 Health, Health Promotion, and the Arts
- 1.2 Arts to Address the Five Health Promotion Action Areas
- 1.2.1 Strengthen Community Action
- 1.2.2 Develop Personal Skills
- 1.2.3 Create Supportive Environments
- 1.2.4 Reorient Health Services
- 1.2.5 Build Healthy Public Policy
- 1.3 About This Book
- References
- Part II: Arts and Health Promotion: Tools and Bridges for Practice
- Chapter 2: Drawing as a Salutogenic Therapy Aid for Grieving Adolescents
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 The Context
- 2.3 Theoretical Framework
- 2.4 The Intervention: Balekane EARTH
- 2.4.1 Method
- 2.4.2 Data Analysis
- 2.5 Findings
- 2.5.1 Stressors
- 2.5.1.1 Witchcraft
- 2.5.1.2 Sudden Death
- 2.5.1.3 Ghosts and the Dead
- 2.5.1.4 Caregiver Suicide
- 2.5.1.5 Poverty
- 2.5.2 Resources and Strategies
- 2.5.2.1 Peers
- 2.5.2.2 Relatives
- 2.5.2.3 Social Workers
- 2.5.2.4 Community Leaders
- 2.5.2.5 Community Members
- 2.5.2.6 Spirituality
- 2.6 Discussion
- 2.6.1 Comprehensibility
- 2.6.2 Manageability
- 2.6.3 Meaningfulness
- 2.7 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 3: Promoting Spiritual Health: Using Poetry as a Coping Strategy for Iranian Women Post-divorce
- 3.1 Divorce as a Complex Life Event
- 3.1.1 Divorce in Iran
- 3.1.2 Factors Contributing to Divorce
- 3.2 Post-divorce Life Among Iranian Women
- 3.2.1 Post-divorce Life Adjustment: Developing Personal Skills
- 3.3 Meaning-Making and Spiritual Health: An Under-examined Concept in Health Promotion
- 3.3.1 Art as an Effective Personal Development Strategy
- 3.3.1.1 The Work of Rumi
- 3.4 Describing the Initiative
- 3.5 Iranian Women Post-divorce: Lived Experience.
- 3.5.1 Meaning-Making: Engaging with Rumi
- 3.6 Participants' Experiences in the Program
- 3.7 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 4: Student Creativity and Professional Artwork in a School Food Intervention in Denmark
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Background
- 4.3 Conceptual Framework
- 4.4 Planning and Conducting LOMA Teaching
- 4.5 Case Study of a LOMA Week in a Primary School
- 4.6 Evaluation of Case Study
- 4.6.1 Limitations and Implications
- 4.7 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 5: Creatively Healthy: Art in a Care Home Setting in Scotland
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Art, Health, and Well-being
- 5.3 Social Isolation and Loneliness
- 5.4 The Aging Population, Dementia, and Alzheimer's Disease
- 5.5 The Arts and the Care of Older Adults
- 5.6 The Project: "Tree of Many Colours"
- 5.6.1 The Care Home Setting
- 5.6.2 Project Aim and Objectives
- 5.6.3 Project Team
- 5.6.4 Funding
- 5.6.5 Project Planning
- 5.6.6 Practical and Creative Considerations
- 5.6.7 Project Evaluation
- 5.6.8 Results
- 5.6.8.1 Theme 1: Having Fun Doing Something New
- 5.6.8.2 Theme 2: Excitement
- 5.6.8.3 Theme 3: Being Creative and Artistic
- 5.6.8.4 Theme 4: Memory
- 5.6.8.5 Theme 5: Impact on Health and Well-being
- 5.6.9 Other Captured Qualitative Data
- 5.7 Observations and Reflections
- 5.7.1 Challenges and Considerations
- 5.7.2 What Could Be Done Differently?
- 5.8 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 6: CuidarNos: Art and Social Work to Address Trauma Among Gender-based Violence Advocates After Hurricane María in Puerto Rico
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Seeing a Need
- 6.3 Encuentro CuidarNOS
- 6.4 Processing Trauma and Healing Through Art
- 6.4.1 Phases of the Encuentro CuidarNOS
- 6.5 Encuentro CuidarNOS from the Inside: Experiences of Participants
- 6.6 Reflections
- 6.7 Discussion and Conclusion
- References.
- Chapter 7: Community Theater for Health Promotion in Japan
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 The History of Japanese Society and Community Arts
- 7.2.1 Japanese Community Theater Stages: Eighteenth Century-1920s
- 7.2.2 Taisho Democracy
- 7.2.3 Kenji Miyazawa and Farmer's Arts
- 7.3 Health Care in Japanese Farming Communities and Saku General Hospital
- 7.3.1 Health in Japan 1910-1940
- 7.3.2 Health in Usuda Village
- 7.3.3 Saku Hospital and Dr. Toshikazu Wakatsuki
- 7.3.4 Health Promotion for Saving Lives
- 7.4 Wakatsuki's Strategy of Theater-Based Health Promotion
- 7.4.1 Planning Medical Drama
- 7.4.2 Scripts Using Jargon and Everyday Words with Local Dialogue
- 7.4.3 The Wider Impact of Theater-Based Interventions
- 7.4.4 Involving Medical Professionals in Dramas
- 7.5 Results and the Development of Community Health
- 7.5.1 The Work of Saku Hospital's Theater Group
- 7.5.2 Development of Health Promotion with New Media
- 7.6 Conclusion
- References
- Part III: Arts and Health Promotion: Tools and Bridges for Research
- Chapter 8: Lights, Camera, (Youth Participatory) Action! Lessons from Filming a Documentary with Trans and Gender Non-conforming Youth in the USA
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 The Experiences of TGNC Youth
- 8.3 The Untitled Trans Youth Film Project
- 8.3.1 Inputs: Mission, Participants, Partners, and Funding
- 8.3.2 Throughputs: Implementation, Execution, and Analysis
- 8.3.3 Output: The In-Progress Film
- 8.4 Discussion
- 8.4.1 Possibilities and Promise
- 8.4.2 Challenges
- 8.4.3 Lessons Learned
- 8.5 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 9: From Arts to Action: Project SHINE as a Case Study of Engaging Youth in Efforts to Develop Sustainable Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Strategies in Rural Tanzania and India
- 9.1 Arts-Based Engagement in Research: Project SHINE.
- 9.2 SHINE Tanzania: An Application of the Arts to Create a Broad Platform for Youth Expression and Engagement
- 9.2.1 Open Defecation Mapping
- 9.2.2 Sanitation Science Fair-Culturally Relevant Knowledge Translation Strategies
- 9.2.3 SHINE Arts-Based School and Community Event
- 9.2.3.1 Sanitation Mural
- 9.2.3.2 Time Capsule
- 9.2.3.3 Digital Stories
- 9.3 Formative Research: Application of Photovoice in the Adaption of Project SHINE to an Indian Community
- 9.3.1 Photovoice: An Effective and Engaging Tool for Adapting the SHINE Intervention
- 9.3.2 Shared Power: From Critical Dialogue to Action
- 9.3.2.1 Project SHINE India Adaptation
- 9.3.2.2 Photovoice Photograph Exhibition
- 9.4 Reflections, Considerations, and Lessons Learned
- 9.4.1 Meaningful Processes of Participant Engagement in Participatory Arts-Based Research
- 9.4.2 The Potential for Arts-Based Methods as a Tool for Empowerment and Catalyst for Social Change
- 9.4.3 Tapping the Potential of Arts-Based Methods for Unlocking the Creativity and Curiosity of Youth in Health Promotion Interventions
- 9.4.4 Can Arts-Based Methods Alleviate Power Imbalances?
- 9.5 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 10: Photovoice for Health Promotion Research, Empowerment, and Advocacy: Young Refugee Stories from Turkey
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 The Photovoice Process
- 10.2.1 Setting
- 10.2.2 Participants
- 10.2.3 Study Timeline and Steps
- 10.3 Project Findings and Impact
- 10.3.1 Advocacy Through Dissemination
- 10.4 Discussion
- 10.5 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 11: Reframing Health Promotion Research and Practice in Australia and the Pacific: The Value of Arts-Based Practices
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 Framing and Reframing Arts and Health Promotion Research
- 11.3 Case Studies
- 11.3.1 Case Study 1: Evaluation of IT ALL BEGINS WITH LOVE.
- 11.3.2 Case Study 2: IMPACT Community Choir
- 11.3.3 Case Study 3: Implications of Male Circumcision for Women in Papua New Guinea, Including for HIV Prevention
- 11.3.4 Case Study 4: Using Poetic Inquiry to Story Aboriginal Recovery in Mental Health Care
- 11.4 Discussion
- 11.5 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 12: A Kaleidoscope of Words and Senses to (Re)Think the Chagas Problem: Experiences in Argentina and Brazil
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 What Are We Talking About When We Talk About Chagas?
- 12.2.1 Biomedical Dimension
- 12.2.2 Epidemiological Dimension
- 12.2.3 Socio-cultural Dimension
- 12.2.4 Political Dimension
- 12.3 Brief Thoughts on the Art-Chagas Problem Dialogue
- 12.4 "Brushstrokes" About the Theoretical Context That Guides and Inspires Our Work
- 12.5 Presentation of the Case Example-Where Did These Texts Come from?
- 12.6 Some Methodological Considerations
- 12.6.1 Objective One: Conceptual Representations
- 12.6.1.1 Systemic Network Technique
- 12.6.1.2 Word Cloud
- 12.6.2 Objective Two: Actors Characterization
- 12.7 What These Written Words Do (and Do Not) Say
- 12.7.1 About the Dimensions Crossing the Texts
- 12.7.2 About the Characters Present in These Texts
- 12.7.2.1 Active Characters
- 12.7.2.2 Passive Characters
- 12.8 Final Words: What This Kaleidoscope of Words and Senses Left Us With
- References
- Chapter 13: Mapping the Discourse on the Health-Promoting Impacts of Community Arts
- 13.1 Introduction
- 13.2 Methods
- 13.3 Ecological Analysis of CA Health-Promoting Impacts
- 13.3.1 Micro-level Impacts
- 13.3.2 Meso-level Impacts
- 13.3.3 Macro-level Impacts
- 13.4 Goals and Epistemologies of CA Impact Analyses
- 13.4.1 Making the Case/Scaling Up
- 13.4.2 Articulating and Uncovering Process
- 13.4.3 Mapping Mechanisms and Building Testable Theories
- 13.5 Key Themes and Tensions.
- 13.6 Potential Ways Forward.