| Literature DB >> 21597904 |
Abstract
The aim of this study is to describe how hermeneutic photography and one application of hermeneutic photography in particular, namely the photo-instrument, can be used as a health care intervention that fosters meaning (re-)construction of mental illness experiences. Studies into the ways how patients construct meaning in illness narratives indicate that aesthetic expressions of experiences may play an important role in meaning making and sharing. The study is part of a larger research project devoted to understanding the photostories that result from groups of psychiatric patients using the photo-instrument. Within a focused ethnography approach we employed a qualitative design of a single case study. Text analysis of photostories was combined with observational data. Data were analyzed using hermeneutic theory. Participant observations were used for triangulation and complementarity. The interaction and collaboration between health care professionals and patients in the context of a photo group emerged as core concept that underlies the photo-instrument. The interaction triggered a reframing of meaning in the patient's illness narrative that offered new perspectives on positive identity growth. The role of visualizing meaning in images was found to lend a dynamic power to the process and triggered a dialectic between real life circumstances and imagination played out in the context of situated action. The findings suggest that a positive reframing of meaning in illness narratives is facilitated by the photo-instrument.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 21597904 PMCID: PMC3334490 DOI: 10.1007/s10728-011-0176-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Care Anal ISSN: 1065-3058
Frequency, average age, sexe ratio and diagnoses according to residence status in patients included at the start of the study, N = 74
| Variables | Acute and short stay | Long stay | Total inpatients | Outpatients | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 9 | 23 | 32 | 42 | 74 |
| Average age | 35 | 45 | 42 | 42 | Av. age 40 |
| Male | 3 | 11 | 14 | 15 | 29 |
| Female | 6 | 12 | 18 | 27 | 45 |
| Main diagnosis: schizophrenia related | 6 | 12 | 18 | 12 | 30 |
| Main diagnosis: mood disturbances | 0 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 8 |
| Main diagnosis: personality problems | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 6 |
| Diagnosis: other | 1 | 8 | 9 | 16 | 25 |
| Missing diagnoses | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 5 |
Core concepts of the photo-instrument operationalized into methodological steps (actions) and illustrated with examples from the case of Boris
| Actions | Examples in the case of Boris |
|---|---|
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| Photo-elicitation | The nurse asked Boris what the scooter on his photograph meant to him |
| Probing | The nurse tries to surface deeper layers of meaning by asking what challenge there is in for him when he mentions the issue of losing weight |
| Prolongued dialogue | The nurse engages in a dialogue with Boris over his wish and how to realize it that extends itself over several sessions. In this way the fluidity of narrative truth and its changeablity is emphasized |
| Re-iterant testing of text | Boris got the opportunity to adjust his texts where he was asked to select photographs and text for the photo-exhibition, thus to integrate his newly developed understanding that losing weight was after all possible |
| Focusing of attention | The assignment to photograph a wish and also how one would realize this wish focused Boris on his issue. So did the instruction to group photographs together and paste a memosticker to every group with a label that described the group. There is a continuous process of selecting and prioritizing of photographs and text |
| Anchoring | The nurse steered Boris toward concrete actions and a realistic scenario. She helped him to anchor his photo story in his actual life world |
| Bridging of contexts | The nurse stimulated Boris to look beyond a more restricted version of his story that focused on his being unable to follow up the dietician’s advice |
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| Holding and containment | The dosed and structured way helped Boris to overcome his initial reticence. The nurse emphasized the need for confidentiality of everything that participants told during sessions. Discussing the impact of his photo story on invited guests of the exhibition the nurse helped Boris to feel responsible for exposing certain traits of himself and also to draw the line at a point beyond he wanted to keep things for himself |
| Organisation of a photo-exhibition | Sharing his photo story with others at the photo-exhibition was another means of committing Boris to his agenda of changing his life style. At the same time it gave him an opportunity to present himself as an agent of his own life. We observed how his face shone at the opening night of the exhibition when he showed around his wife and children |
| Exchange of text in a peer group | The nurse stimulated listening to the stories of others and invited everyone to respond to each other with positive feedback. Within-group comparison of stories contributed to a more realistic attuning or to a recognizing of potential obstacles, as was the case when Boris learned from others how medication may drain your energy. Discussing these issues with the group the nurse fostered more openness |
| Anticipation of future action | The nurse challenged Boris to break out of his fixation on disempowering feelings from the past and present. The opportunity to first imagine possible future actions and then make it visible mentalizes action schemes and works as a kind of virtual simulation |
Fig. 1The scooter
Fig. 2Two pairs of trousers with different sizes on a drying mill: “Losing weight is important. I’m too heavy now. A better physical condition is healthy. Now I’m tired every time I do something. I think it is hard to lose weight”
Fig. 3Martha, the group facilitator pushing him: “I need help to lose weight. I move too little. I think it is not that easy and I am not motivated”
Fig. 4Sausages on a cooking-range: “Nice sausages on the roaster. I love them, but I can’t have too much of them. Actually I don’t eat that much. But if I like something, I eat more. When I look at the picture I’m getting a bit peckish. The smell and the taste of the sausages (trigger me). I’ve been to the dietician for it. She couldn’t help me. If I eat less, I keep being hungry. It affects how I feel”
Fig. 5Boris on a bike: “Biking would be a challenge. They tell me to go biking, but it’s up to me to actually do it. If I want to lose weight then I have to. Maybe a tandem bike is a good idea. Then I don’t have to bike on my own”
Fig. 6Boris and his dog: “Max is my resource (referring to the assignment that instructed participants to also photograph their resources that supported them). He makes me walk much further than I otherwise would do. Max walks alongside me and together we take a break every now and then, when he wants to pee”