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Unmasking quality: exploring meanings of health by doing art

Unmasking quality: exploring meanings of health by doing art
Unmasking quality: exploring meanings of health by doing art
Background
Quality in healthcare has many potential meanings and interpretations. The case has been made for conceptualisations of quality that place more emphasis on describing quality and less on measuring it through structured, vertically oriented metrics. Through discussion of an interdisciplinary community arts project we explore and challenge the dominant reductionist meanings of quality in healthcare.

Discussion
The model for structured participatory arts workshops such as ours is ‘art as conversation’. In creating textile art works, women involved in the sewing workshops engaged at a personal level, developing confidence through sharing ideas, experiences and humour. Group discussions built on the self-assurance gained from doing craft work together and talking in a relaxed way with a common purpose, exploring the health themes which were the focus of the art. For example, working on a textile about vitamin D created a framework which stimulated the emergence of a common discourse about different cultural practices around ‘going out in the sun’. These conversations have value as ‘bridging work’, between the culture of medicine, with its current emphasis on lifestyle change to prevent illness, and patients’ life worlds. Such bridges allow for innovation and flexibility to reflect local public health needs and community concerns. They also enable us to view care from a horizontally oriented perspective, so that the interface in which social worlds and the biomedical model meet and interpenetrate is made visible.

Summary
Through this interdisciplinary art project involving academics, health professionals and the local community we have become more sensitised to conceptualising one aspect of health care quality as ensuring a ‘space for the story’ in health care encounters. This space gives precedence to the patient narratives, but acknowledges the importance of enabling clinicians to have time to share stories about care.
1471-2296
1-6
Kelly, Moira
d171e87a-1d50-448e-80f8-5013ad48945f
Rivas, Carol
040bfbc1-0aef-4826-ab58-e85743fea9d4
Foell, Jens
75b57f43-de60-408d-a060-18106aafa67f
Llewellyn-Dunn, Janet
26777ffd-c83a-4cb5-8a3e-9700702d0c64
England, Diana
4d40a6c5-092a-486b-a396-8b354d1e35c1
Cocciadiferro, Anna
f0357f14-13ad-4c61-b90d-48609c5d4ea2
Hull, Sally
a87c6f6d-fa4b-4684-b09d-0a21ab5cbb4b
Kelly, Moira
d171e87a-1d50-448e-80f8-5013ad48945f
Rivas, Carol
040bfbc1-0aef-4826-ab58-e85743fea9d4
Foell, Jens
75b57f43-de60-408d-a060-18106aafa67f
Llewellyn-Dunn, Janet
26777ffd-c83a-4cb5-8a3e-9700702d0c64
England, Diana
4d40a6c5-092a-486b-a396-8b354d1e35c1
Cocciadiferro, Anna
f0357f14-13ad-4c61-b90d-48609c5d4ea2
Hull, Sally
a87c6f6d-fa4b-4684-b09d-0a21ab5cbb4b

Kelly, Moira, Rivas, Carol, Foell, Jens, Llewellyn-Dunn, Janet, England, Diana, Cocciadiferro, Anna and Hull, Sally (2015) Unmasking quality: exploring meanings of health by doing art. BMC Family Practice, 16 (28), 1-6. (doi:10.1186/s12875-015-0233-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Quality in healthcare has many potential meanings and interpretations. The case has been made for conceptualisations of quality that place more emphasis on describing quality and less on measuring it through structured, vertically oriented metrics. Through discussion of an interdisciplinary community arts project we explore and challenge the dominant reductionist meanings of quality in healthcare.

Discussion
The model for structured participatory arts workshops such as ours is ‘art as conversation’. In creating textile art works, women involved in the sewing workshops engaged at a personal level, developing confidence through sharing ideas, experiences and humour. Group discussions built on the self-assurance gained from doing craft work together and talking in a relaxed way with a common purpose, exploring the health themes which were the focus of the art. For example, working on a textile about vitamin D created a framework which stimulated the emergence of a common discourse about different cultural practices around ‘going out in the sun’. These conversations have value as ‘bridging work’, between the culture of medicine, with its current emphasis on lifestyle change to prevent illness, and patients’ life worlds. Such bridges allow for innovation and flexibility to reflect local public health needs and community concerns. They also enable us to view care from a horizontally oriented perspective, so that the interface in which social worlds and the biomedical model meet and interpenetrate is made visible.

Summary
Through this interdisciplinary art project involving academics, health professionals and the local community we have become more sensitised to conceptualising one aspect of health care quality as ensuring a ‘space for the story’ in health care encounters. This space gives precedence to the patient narratives, but acknowledges the importance of enabling clinicians to have time to share stories about care.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2015
Published date: 26 February 2015
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 377492
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377492
ISSN: 1471-2296
PURE UUID: a082760c-cc42-4421-82a8-d70b51e7ba16

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 15 Jun 2015 13:22
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:05

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Contributors

Author: Moira Kelly
Author: Carol Rivas
Author: Jens Foell
Author: Janet Llewellyn-Dunn
Author: Diana England
Author: Anna Cocciadiferro
Author: Sally Hull

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