Exhibiting lived experiences of disability in a hospital workplace: A qualitative evaluation.

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Disability and Health Journal Pub Date : 2024-11-15 DOI:10.1016/j.dhjo.2024.101752
Nina Michelle Worthington, Charlotte Grainger
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Abstract

Background: Beyond the Stigma (BTS) was an exhibition of stories about staff with physical and hidden impairments at the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK.

Objective: Evaluative research aimed to examine BTS's long-term impact on participants who publicly shared lived experiences of disability in their hospital workplace. It also sought to discover how arts-based interventions can effectively identify and promote nuanced disability understandings and the wellbeing of disabled people working in healthcare.

Methods: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) interviews were conducted with six hospital staff. Transcripts were analyzed in depth.

Results: Three superordinate themes emerged from the data, Process of Hesitancy and Comfort, Perceptions of Impact and Contribution, and Journeying with Disability Understandings. These captured personal narratives of how it felt to disclose impairment and perceptions of the project's impact. Long-term benefits of taking part in BTS were identified as increased self-confidence, openness, self-acceptance, and empowerment. Shifts in participants' personal disability views pointed to improved quality of life inside and outside the workplace through new awareness of diverse and shared experiences, new ease with disability definitions, language, self-identity, and community participation.

Conclusion: Study findings exposed levels of risk, resilience, and compromise associated with sharing personal experiences of disability, and how these can be managed effectively in the workplace. BTS offers a model for health promotion and community participation across disabled and non-disabled communities that can be repeated and adapted to support employment strategies, shift understandings, and promote notions of disability gain and disability pride across healthcare settings.

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在医院工作场所展示残疾人士的生活经历:定性评估。
背景:英国伯明翰皇家矫形外科医院 NHS 基金信托基金会举办了 "超越耻辱"(BTS)展览:英国伯明翰皇家骨科医院 NHS 基金会信托基金会举办了 "超越耻辱"(BTS)展览,展出了有身体缺陷和隐性缺陷的员工的故事:评估研究旨在考察 "超越障碍 "对在医院工作场所公开分享残疾生活经历的参与者的长期影响。研究还试图发现基于艺术的干预措施如何能够有效识别和促进对残疾的细致入微的理解,以及在医疗保健领域工作的残疾人的福祉:方法:对六名医院员工进行了解释性现象学分析(IPA)访谈。对访谈记录进行了深入分析:结果:从数据中发现了三个首要主题,即犹豫和舒适的过程、对影响和贡献的看法以及对残疾的理解。这些主题反映了个人对披露残障状况的感受以及对项目影响的看法。参加 BTS 的长期益处被认为是增强了自信心、开放性、自我接纳和能力。参与者个人残疾观点的转变表明,通过对不同和共同经历的新认识,对残疾定义、语言、自我认同和社区参与的新适应,工作场所内外的生活质量都得到了改善:研究结果揭示了与分享个人残疾经历相关的风险、复原力和妥协程度,以及如何在工作场所有效管理这些风险、复原力和妥协程度。BTS 为残疾人和非残疾人社区的健康促进和社区参与提供了一种模式,这种模式可以重复使用并加以调整,以支持就业策略、转变理解,并在医疗保健环境中促进残疾收益和残疾自豪感的概念。
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来源期刊
Disability and Health Journal
Disability and Health Journal HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
6.70%
发文量
134
审稿时长
34 days
期刊介绍: Disability and Health Journal is a scientific, scholarly, and multidisciplinary journal for reporting original contributions that advance knowledge in disability and health. Topics may be related to global health, quality of life, and specific health conditions as they relate to disability. Such contributions include: • Reports of empirical research on the characteristics of persons with disabilities, environment, health outcomes, and determinants of health • Reports of empirical research on the Systematic or other evidence-based reviews and tightly conceived theoretical interpretations of research literature • Reports of empirical research on the Evaluative research on new interventions, technologies, and programs • Reports of empirical research on the Reports on issues or policies affecting the health and/or quality of life for persons with disabilities, using a scientific base.
期刊最新文献
Intellectual disabilities and risk of cardiovascular diseases: A population-based cohort study. Exhibiting lived experiences of disability in a hospital workplace: A qualitative evaluation. Disability and intimate partner violence experience among women in rural Samoa: A cross-sectional analysis. Exploring the physical, psychological, and social benefits of adaptive outdoor cycling in persons with stroke using a mixed methods approach. History and future directions of DHJO.
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