1. Exploring the experiences of high-risk groups during the first UK Covid-19 lockdown through creative methods.
- Author
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Wilson, Ceri, Lane, Pauline, Chandler, Rebecca, and Teatheredge, Julie
- Subjects
RISK assessment ,INFECTION control ,ART ,MENTAL health ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,OPTIMISM ,RESEARCH funding ,AT-risk people ,INTERVIEWING ,POSITIVE psychology ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,LONELINESS ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STAY-at-home orders ,CREATIVE ability ,THEMATIC analysis ,EXPERIENCE ,POETRY (Literary form) ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,WRITTEN communication ,VIDEO recording ,HOPE ,WELL-being ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background: Groups at high risk of severe illness/death from COVID-19 (older people and those identified as clinically extremely vulnerable: CEV) experienced increased restrictions, poor mental health and loneliness during the first UK lockdown. Methods: Seventeen older adults, eight CEV adults, one parent of a CEV child, and two family carers of CEV adults, shared their experiences of the first UK lockdown through various media: written reflections, interviews, poetry, videos, photographs, and visual artwork. Results: Through a positive psychology lens, five themes were identified: experiencing loss; community and connection; finding joy, hope and optimism; adapting to change; and sense- and meaning-making. Conclusion: High-risk groups fostered wellbeing and flourishing and formed a sense of coherence in a time of great loss. Engagement with artistic, creative, and cultural activities facilitated this. The arts not only provided a creative means of collecting data but was also identified as a central thread in the findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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