Let's go outside: using photography to explore values and culture in mental health nursing

被引:9
作者
Aranda, K. [1 ]
De Goeas, S. [2 ]
Davies, S. [2 ]
Radcliffe, M. [1 ]
Christoforou, A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Brighton, Sch Hlth Sci, Falmer BN1 9PH, England
[2] Univ Brighton, Sch Hlth Sci, Robert Dodd, Eastbourne, England
关键词
cross-cultural issues; culture; ethnicity; education; ethics; qualitative methodology; ARTS; EDUCATION; NURSES; PHOTOVOICE; HUMANITIES; ATTITUDES; RECOVERY; ILLNESS; CARE;
D O I
10.1111/jpm.12201
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Accessible summary Creative and imaginative approaches to mental healthcare education are known to help students explore emotions, empathy and others' experiences, as well as address ambivalence and ambiguity. Very few studies in mental health nursing education specifically utilise photography as a participatory pedagogic tool, with even fewer utilising photography to explore understandings of culture, values and diversity. Photography makes visible complex, collaborative forms of learning and previously unidentified, unarticulated ideas about culture and values. Photography as a critical pedagogic method helps develop critical, politicized understandings of culture and values. AbstractIncreasing culturally diverse populations means complex and conflicting values have become a common feature in mental health nursing. In education the need to critically examine such topics necessitates creative and engaging pedagogy, and visual methods are readily acknowledged as such. Yet while many studies advocate and demonstrate the value of art-based methods in student learning, very few studies in mental health nursing specifically utilize photography as a participatory pedagogic tool, and fewer still use photography to explore understandings of culture, values and diversity. In this paper, we discuss a qualitative study where mental health nursing students used photography to create images in order to explore their own and often dominant culture and attendant values. Findings suggest that photography makes visible situated, relational and collaborative learning, and surfaces previously unidentified, unarticulated ideas about culture and values. These practices mimic important processes central to mental health nursing practice and contemporaneous understandings of diverse cultures. We argue that photography provides an important resource with which to unearth subjugated knowledge, promote critical understandings of culture and values, and thereby help address inequalities in mental health care.
引用
收藏
页码:306 / 315
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Alternative mental health clinical placements: Knowledge transfer and benefits for nursing practice outside mental healthcare settings
    Goman, Caitlin
    Patterson, Christopher
    Moxham, Lorna
    Harada, Theresa
    Tapsell, Amy
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2020, 29 (17-18) : 3236 - 3245
  • [2] 'There's more to a person than what's in front of you': Nursing students' experiences of consumer taught mental health education
    Happell, Brenda
    Waks, Shifra
    Bocking, Julia
    Horgan, Aine
    Manning, Fionnuala
    Greaney, Sonya
    Goodwin, John
    Scholz, Brett
    van der Vaart, Kornelis Jan
    Allon, Jerry
    Granerud, Arild
    Hals, Elisabeth
    Doody, Rory
    Russell, Siobhan
    Giffin, Martha
    MacGabhann, Liam
    Lahti, Mari
    Ellila, Heikki
    Pulli, Jarmo
    Vatula, Annaliina
    Platania-Phung, Chris
    Bjornsson, Einar
    Biering, Pall
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2019, 28 (04) : 950 - 959
  • [3] Redressing the balance in mental health nursing education: Arguments for a values-based approach
    Hewitt, Jeanette
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2009, 18 (05) : 368 - 379
  • [4] It's the Anxiety: Facilitators and Inhibitors to Nursing Students' Career Interests in Mental Health Nursing
    Happell, Brenda
    Platania-Phung, Chris
    Harris, Scott
    Bradshaw, Julie
    ISSUES IN MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2014, 35 (01) : 50 - 57
  • [5] An Educational Program for Nursing and Social Work Students Using Artwork Created by People with Mental Health Problems
    Yamauchi, Takashi
    Takeshima, Tadashi
    Hirokawa, Seiko
    Oba, Yoshitaka
    Koh, Eugen
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ADDICTION, 2017, 15 (03) : 503 - 513
  • [6] Using simulation to improve the capability of undergraduate nursing students in mental health care
    Kunst, Elicia L.
    Mitchell, Marion
    Johnston, Amy N. B.
    NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2017, 50 : 29 - 35
  • [7] Let's play and learn: Educational escape room to improve mental health knowledge in undergraduate nursing students
    Arrue, Marta
    Suarez, Nerea
    Ugartemendia-Yerobi, Maider
    Babarro, Izaro
    NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2025, 144
  • [8] Asian Indians in America: The influence of values and culture on mental health
    Chandra, Rohit M.
    Arora, Lily
    Mehta, Urvakhsh M.
    Asnaani, Anu
    Radhakrishnan, Rajiv
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 22 : 202 - 209
  • [9] Master's level mental health nursing competencies, a prerequisite for equal health among service users in mental health care
    Jormfeldt, Henrika
    Doyle, Louise
    Ellila, Heikki
    Lahti, Mari
    Higgins, Agnes
    Keogh, Brian
    Meade, Oonagh
    Stickley, Theodore
    Sitvast, Jan
    Skarsater, Ingela
    Kilkku, Nina
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE STUDIES ON HEALTH AND WELL-BEING, 2018, 13
  • [10] Promoting positive perceptions and person centred care toward people with mental health problems using co-design with nursing students
    Tee, Stephen
    Ozcetin, Yeter Sinem Uzar
    NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2016, 44 : 116 - 120