利用创意和艺术促进南非感染艾滋病毒的青年的心理健康。

Southern African journal of HIV medicine Pub Date : 2024-12-20 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.4102/sajhivmed.v25i1.1656
Jacqueline Hoare, Rebecca Sher, Kathryn R Cullen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

获得对青少年友好、与文化相关和无耻辱感的心理健康支持,对于减少感染艾滋病毒的青年心理疾病带来的长期心理、社会和经济挑战至关重要。现在比以往任何时候都更需要探索和支持创新的任务转移干预措施,通过这些干预措施,非精神卫生专业人员向青年卫生组织提供精神卫生支持。虽然其中许多人已经考虑将任务转移给护士,但从YLWH所在社区的艺术家那里获得智慧和灵感可能是一种新颖且潜在强大的任务转移策略。在这篇评论文章中,我们建议在未来的研究中探索艺术,作为南非青年妇女心理健康干预的有希望的途径。Better Together是一个针对患有慢性疾病的青少年的同伴支持干预,我们的团队之前发表过。作为讨论的一部分,我们分享了Better Together参与者自己提供的关于创意艺术部分的反馈。总的来说,这些反馈产生了几个关键的见解,进一步强调了这样一种观点,即为青年提供在群体环境中从事创造性艺术的机会,可能是解决南非青年妇女健康问题的一个有希望的平台。具体来说,我们了解到(1)年轻人享受创造性参与的机会,(2)这些经历帮助他们与他人联系,(3)他们对自己和他们的生活有了新的见解和视角,(4)他们的情绪和幸福感受到了积极的影响。
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Using creativity and the arts to promote mental health in youth living with HIV in South Africa.

Access to adolescent-friendly, culturally relevant and stigma-free mental health support is essential for reducing the long-term psychological, social and economic challenges of mental illness of youth living with HIV (YLWH). Now more than ever, innovative task-shifting interventions, through which non-mental health professionals provide mental health support to YLWH, need to be explored and supported. While many of these have considered shifting tasks to nurses, tapping into the wisdom and inspiration from artists in the community where YLWH are living could represent a novel and potentially powerful task-shifting strategy. In this opinion piece, we propose that the arts could be explored in future studies as a promising avenue for mental health interventions for YLWH in South Africa. Better Together is a peer-support intervention for youth living with chronic illness, which has been published previously by our team. As part of the discussion, we share feedback about the creative arts component of the Better Together groups provided by Better Together participants themselves. Overall, this feedback yielded several key insights which further underscore the idea that providing youth with opportunities to engage in creative arts in a group setting may represent a promising platform for addressing mental health in YLWH in South Africa. Specifically, we learned that (1) youth enjoyed the opportunity to engage creatively, (2) these experiences helped them connect with others, (3) they gained new insights and perspectives about themselves and their lives, and (4) they experienced a positive impact on their mood and well-being.

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