Seeing and Being Seen: The Impact of Art Making on the Experience of Isolation and Fear in Patient Care

Author:

Byrne Libby12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia

2. Whitley College, Religion and Social Policy Network, University of Divinity, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

A positive diagnosis for COVID-19 is a threat not only to the health of an individual but also to the community where the disease manifests. Rather than being the discreet experience of a few or some, many people now appreciate our shared vulnerability with the threat of uncontained and incurable illness in our midst. “In this era of unspecified isolation, contagious disease, and with no sign of returning to normal life soon, coronavirus is putting an adverse effect on people’s mental health” (1). While managing the spread of COVID-19 has necessitated the use of social distancing and isolation a means of expressing care, equating care with the experience of fear and isolation can place unseen mental health burdens on inner resources for supporting the well-being of patients and those who care for them. Art can offer a remedy for this experience, lending the quality of durability to our fragile human experience and inviting us to extend the ways in which we see, think, and make sense of the world.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference7 articles.

1. Fear and agony of the pandemic leading to stress and mental illness: An emerging crisis in the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak

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3. Healing in the Absence of a Cure

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