‘Reflecting or frozen?’ The impact of Covid-19 on art therapists working with people with a learning disability

IF 2.3 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
N. Power, R. Dolby, D. Thorne
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background A series of online practice development discussions were held during the Covid-19 pandemic by the Art Therapy and Learning Disability Professional Support Group of the British Association of Art Therapists (formerly known as the Special Interest Group). Aims (1) To capture the experiences of art therapists living through and working with this population during the global pandemic; (2) To describe the barriers and facilitators for online art therapy with people with a learning disability. Methods An anonymised, hand-written record was made during six 60-minute Zoom sessions. The data was transferred to an Excel database. Reflexive thematic analysis was conducted. Results The resultant themes and thematic map are shared in this paper. The themes are: (A) The pandemic as leveller. (B) The joy and jeopardy of working online. (C) Art after the eclipse. (D) The function of the professional support group. (E) Insight and understanding to meet client diversity. Conclusions Stimulated by the national restrictions imposed due to the pandemic, art therapy practice changed at an unprecedented pace. Online art therapy for people with a learning disability may provide a viable alternative to face-to-face art therapy. The BAAT Professional Support Group provides an important peer-network for art therapists and could become a practice-based research hub. Implications Further research is needed to develop best-practice online art therapy; this must include experts by experience as co-researchers. Additional training will be needed for art therapists to practice safely and confidently online. Plain-language summary In 2020, the coronavirus made many people across the world sick, some people died. In the UK, our government asked us to stay at home to help to stop the virus spreading. Lots of things changed very suddenly – activities, hobbies and therapy were stopped. This meant that people with a learning disability were not able to keep coming to their art therapy sessions. Art therapists across the UK met on the internet, using a video-chat, to talk about what changes they had made in their clinical practice, whether they were able to keep therapy going during the pandemic and how they felt about the changes. We wanted to understand: (1) Art therapists' experiences during the pandemic. (2) What's helped and what's gotten in the way when art therapists have worked online with people with a learning disability. This piece of research uses a qualitative research procedure called 'thematic analysis' to make sense of different people's views. Thematic analysis is a systematic way of organising and interpreting large volumes of information, called 'data'. In this research, the data is people's words, which were written down live during the six video-chat meetings. Using thematic analysis helps us to find patterns in the data where people have a similar or different view. These patterns are called: 'themes'. The themes gave us a concise record of a broad range of people's views. We found five key themes: (A) The pandemic as leveller. (B) The joy and jeopardy of working online. (C) Art after the eclipse. (D) The function of the professional support group. (E) Insight and understanding to meet client diversity. Online art therapy might help some people with a learning disability, but we need more research and training. Art therapists value peer-support. Our peer-support group could help to develop more robust research projects. Video Abstract Read the transcript Watch the video on Vimeo © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
“反射还是冻结?”“新冠肺炎对与学习障碍患者合作的艺术治疗师的影响
摘要背景英国艺术治疗师协会艺术治疗和学习障碍专业支持小组(前身为特殊兴趣小组)在新冠肺炎大流行期间举行了一系列在线实践发展讨论。目的(1)捕捉艺术治疗师在全球疫情期间与这一人群一起生活和工作的经历;(2) 描述学习障碍者在线艺术治疗的障碍和促进因素。方法在六次60分钟的Zoom会议上进行匿名手写记录。数据已传输到Excel数据库。进行了反思性主题分析。结果本文共享了由此产生的主题和主题图。主题是:(A)新冠疫情是平和的。(B) 在线工作的乐趣和危险。(C) 日食后的艺术。(D) 专业支持小组的职能。(E) 满足客户多样性的洞察力和理解力。结论在疫情导致的国家限制措施的刺激下,艺术治疗实践以前所未有的速度发生了变化。针对学习障碍者的在线艺术治疗可能为面对面的艺术治疗提供一种可行的替代方案。BAAT专业支持小组为艺术治疗师提供了一个重要的同行网络,并可能成为一个基于实践的研究中心。含义需要进一步的研究来开发最佳实践在线艺术治疗;这必须包括有共同研究经验的专家。艺术治疗师需要额外的培训才能安全自信地在线练习。简明语言摘要2020年,冠状病毒使世界各地的许多人患病,一些人死亡。在英国,我们的政府要求我们呆在家里,以帮助阻止病毒传播。很多事情突然发生了变化——活动、爱好和治疗都停止了。这意味着有学习障碍的人无法继续参加他们的艺术治疗课程。英国各地的艺术治疗师通过视频聊天在互联网上会面,讨论他们在临床实践中做出了哪些改变,他们是否能够在疫情期间继续接受治疗,以及他们对这些变化的感受。我们想了解:(1)艺术治疗师在疫情期间的经历。(2) 当艺术治疗师在网上与有学习障碍的人合作时,有什么帮助和阻碍。这项研究使用了一种名为“主题分析”的定性研究程序来理解不同的人的观点。专题分析是一种组织和解释大量信息的系统方法,称为“数据”。在这项研究中,数据是人们的话,这些话是在六次视频聊天会议上实时记录下来的。使用主题分析有助于我们在数据中找到人们有相似或不同观点的模式。这些模式被称为:“主题”。这些主题使我们简明扼要地记录了人们的广泛观点。我们发现了五个关键主题:(A)疫情是一个平衡点。(B) 在线工作的乐趣和危险。(C) 日食后的艺术。(D) 专业支持小组的职能。(E) 满足客户多样性的洞察力和理解力。在线艺术治疗可能会帮助一些有学习障碍的人,但我们需要更多的研究和培训。艺术治疗师重视同伴的支持。我们的同行支持小组可以帮助开发更强大的研究项目。视频摘要阅读文字记录在Vimeo上观看视频©2022作者。Informa UK Limited出版,交易名称为Taylor&Francis Group
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
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