Author:
LUZZATTO PAOLA,SERENO VALERIE,CAPPS ROY
Abstract
Objective: The multidimensional aspect of pain suggests the
use of multimodal interventions. The Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center has recently utilized the art therapy modality to help patients
communicate the painful side of their illness in such a way that they
can feel understood and respected. In this paper we describe a simple
innovative art therapy intervention that we have developed within the
Art Therapy Service in the Psychiatric Department of Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.Method: The patients work with a Body Outline as a starting
template, together with the art therapist, in sessions lasting
approximately 45 minutes. They are encouraged to fill the space inside
and outside the Body Outline. They can use colored pastels, markers, or
watercolor or cut out images for a collage.Results: Seventy hospitalized adult cancer patients, 60
women and 10 men, used this intervention between January 1999 and May
2000. We have analyzed the variety of responses from the 70 patients,
and three main groups have emerged, which have focused on the following
issues: (1) visualization of physical pain, (2) communication of
emotions, and (3) search for meaning/spirituality.Significance of results: The results suggest that because of
its abstract symbolic feature, the Body Outline is a very flexible
therapeutic intervention. It must be offered within the relationship
with the art therapist, and it may fulfill quite a variety of
expressive needs, from the description of physical pain to the
elaboration of spiritual longings.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine,General Nursing
Cited by
32 articles.
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