1. Magic as a therapeutic intervention to promote coping in hospitalized pediatric patients.
- Author
-
Hart R and Walton M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Attitude to Health, Chicago, Child, Female, Foundations, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Male, Nurse's Role, Patient Selection, Pediatric Nursing organization & administration, Personnel Selection, Program Development, Program Evaluation, Psychology, Child, Self Concept, Socialization, Wit and Humor as Topic, Adaptation, Psychological, Child, Hospitalized psychology, Magic psychology
- Abstract
Magic as a therapeutic intervention is used in an innovative, hospital-based program to address the psychosocial issues children and adolescents often experience as a result of illness and hospitalization. A child life specialist and a magician with an MBA collaborated, blending clinical expertise with business acumen and professional-level magic skills to create the program. The program has two distinct components: (1) magicians using interactive, close-up magic and humor as a technique to promote socialization, enhance self-esteem, and increase opportunities for choice and control, and (2) magicians providing the personal instruction and materials that enable chronically ill and long-term patients to learn and perform magic to promote a sense of empowerment and feelings of mastery. Positive responses from patients, families, and staff to the program at one hospital led to the creation of Open Heart Magic, a non-profit children's foundation that maintains and staffs bedside, interactive therapeutic magic programs in five hospitals in the Chicago metropolitan area.
- Published
- 2010