数字应用戏剧实践中的互惠教学法:与对COVID-19大流行的不公正反应相反,这种反应贬低和忽视了老年痴呆症患者的权利和生命

N. Abraham
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在本文中,我将提供案例研究见解,以了解数字应用剧院实践的价值,这种实践已经演变为保持以人为本,重视Gail Mitchell等人(2020)所称的“护理关系伦理”,该伦理旨在使痴呆症患者在医院实践的核心成为积极的公民。“创新知识交流:学生参与在NHS(国民健康服务)中提供更好的患者体验”是由英国研究中心和学生办公室联合资助的数字应用剧院项目,与帝国理工学院医疗保健NHS信托的痴呆症护理团队合作。该项目通过zoom提供了六种干预措施,以支持在COVID-19中很少进行社会互动从而产生认知刺激的痴呆症患者,并为老年病房提供药物。每个项目的重点是创建定制的工作坊,体现了我创造的一个术语,“互惠教学法”,这是一种在数字形式的项目实践的翻译和实施过程中发展起来的方法。艺术与健康之间的关系有着悠久而丰富的历史,但最近已知的实践模式要么已经停止,要么不得不通过数字实践适应在线。对于那些不太熟悉Teams、Zoom、Google Meet和Skype等平台的艺术家从业者来说,转向在线干预可能是一种排斥,而对于那些熟悉的人来说,确保有意义的参与的挑战是复杂的。然而,继续成为积极响应的从业者的必要性至关重要,在大流行期间,艺术干预以支持积极福祉的紧迫性只会增加。艺术和医疗保健有着长期的关系,不应该妥协,因为必须通过进入数字领域来穿越新的领域,我认为事实上这个过程是至关重要的,我将从我自己在英国第三次全国封锁期间在医院工作的经历和持续的数字艺术和健康项目中展开和询问。这一大流行病的现实及其对老年人心理健康和福祉的严重影响是深刻的。国际老年精神病学协会讨论了被迫社会孤立的老年人对心理健康和福祉的持续影响。这种情况对于预防COVID-19的传播是不可避免的,但对感染COVID-19的恐惧,或无法接受特定年龄段的医院治疗,以及无法与家人和朋友社交的影响正在导致自杀,焦虑,躁动和孤独的增加。Myrra Vernooij-Dassen(2020)认为,政策制定者没有考虑到社会、心理和认知健康,缺乏社会健康对痴呆症患者的影响尤其有害,导致病情在没有社会互动的情况下迅速恶化。在本文中,我将阐述互惠教学法的概念框架,作为一种响应式数字应用剧场实践的方法,这种方法直接来自我在急性医院环境中开展流行病项目的经验。
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The Pedagogy of Reciprocity in Digital Applied Theatre Practice: The antithesis to unjust responses to the COVID-19 pandemic that have devalued and ignored the rights and lives of older adults living with dementia
In this article, I will offer case study insights into the value of digital applied theatre practice that has evolved to remain person-centred, valuing what Gail Mitchell et al. (2020) termed a ‘relational ethic of care' that seeks to enable active citizenship at the heart of hospital-based practice for patients living with dementia. ‘Innovating Knowledge Exchange: Student Involvement in Delivering Better Patient Experience in the NHS (National Health Service)', is a digital applied theatre project jointly funded by Research England and the Office for Students, in partnership with Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust's Dementia Care Team. The project offers six interventions that happen via zoom to support patients living with dementia who have had little social interaction and thereby cognitive stimulation in COVID-19 and medicine for the elderly wards. The emphasis of each project is to create bespoke workshops that embody a term I have coined, a ‘pedagogy of reciprocity', which is an approach that has evolved over the course of the translation and implementation of the project practice in a digital form. The relationship between arts and health has a long, rich history, but recently known models of practice have either stopped or had to adapt to happen online through digital practice. Moving to online interventions can be exclusionary for artist practitioners who are less familiar with platforms such as Teams, Zoom, Google Meet and Skype, and for those who are familiar, the challenge of ensuring meaningful participation has been complicated. However, the need to continue to be responsive practitioners is vital, and the urgency for arts intervention to support positive wellbeing in the midst of the pandemic has only grown. Arts and healthcare hold a long-standing relationship that should not be compromised because of the necessity to traverse new terrain by entering the domain of the digital, I will argue that in fact this process is vital, and one that I will unpack and interrogate from my own experience working in a hospital during our third national UK lockdown and continuing digital arts and health projects. The reality of the pandemic and the severity of its impact on the mental health and wellbeing of older adults is profound. The International Psychogeriatric Association have discussed the ongoing impact on the mental health and wellbeing of older adults forced to socially isolate. This circumstance is unavoidable for the prevention of the spread of COVID-19, but the fear of contracting COVID-19, or not receiving hospital treatment for particular age brackets, and the impact of not being able to socialise with family and friends is causing a rise in suicide, anxiety, agitation and loneliness. Myrra Vernooij-Dassen (2020) argues that social, mental and cognitive health are not considered by policy makers, and the impact of a lack of social health for people living with dementia is particularly detrimental causing conditions to rapidly deteriorate without social interactions. In this article, I will set out the conceptual framework for the pedagogy of reciprocity as a methodology for responsive digital applied theatre practice that has emerged directly from my experience running projects in the pandemic in acute hospital settings.
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