The project was presented at Brandeis University in 2013.
launch 1 (lônch, länch) verb. 1. To set in motion. 2. To enter enthusiastically into something; plunge. 3. To initiate; embark. 4. To introduce to the public or to a market. 5. To give (someone) a start. 6. To begin a new venture or phase; launch forth on a dangerous mission. An exploration into all the possibilities of Launch using the arts to heal and build peace and community
Showing posts with label Social Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Justice. Show all posts
Friday, 31 January 2014
An arts and Peacebuilding project in Bahrain
The combination of imagination and action is powerful and can be transformative. What follows is a project taken up by a group of young Bahrainian men and women to provide opportunities for renewed tolerance and understandings of each other. It is the story of ULAFA'A, the team of individuals and the process.
They initiated everything from Free Hugs, to collaborative notebooks.
The project was presented at Brandeis University in 2013.
The project was presented at Brandeis University in 2013.
Friday, 20 December 2013
Theatre and Peacebuilding: Arts and Politics
This trailer of a larger project directed by Allison Lund explores the use of theatre as a medium through which people work together to heal community and peace build. It reflects international projects by artists and theatre directors in Cambodia, Australia, Argentina and Uganda. These are new forms of theatre created by people within a community. It raises artistic and peacebuilding dilemmas such as can theatre be used for political purposes and, in doing so, is the aesthetic quality compromised as there is little time to digest the process?
This video, and the projects it portrays is inspiring.
Monday, 9 December 2013
Alzheimer's and environment
Another component of Launch International is using the arts within a healthcare environment to ease patient experience and the workload of the medical staff, by transforming austere medical enviornments into places of healing.
There has been much press recently about the care of elderly people suffering from dementia and Alzheimer's disease. While in Ireland I was part of a project that addressed challenging, and sometimes violent behaviour of patients, while at the same time easing the workload of clinical staff due to the constant attention required to care for this population. In addition, the medical units became reminders of the past with ambient lighting, fake fireplaces and a view created by a mural montage of surrounding nature.
The project was undertaken by Mount Carmel Hospital in Clonakilty County Cork, and saw the transformation medical wards into bedrooms, living rooms, a kitchen and garden. The medical units were renamed Saoirse which in the Irish language means Freedom, in the hopes of encouraging a more liberal approach to the regimental care, and in shifting attitudes of staff and family visitors. The women were encouraged to do what they had traditionally done such as wash dishes, mend trousers, and sit around a "fire" drinking tea and chatting. The men were encouraged to dress when they wanted rather than the required practice of 9 a.m. One male patient was allowed to sleep with his clothes on as he had been a farmer when he was younger and had never married. In several instances, once moved on Saoirse, there was a marked difference in patients who had been highly aggressive.
Rather than write more about it, let me show you some before and after shots . . . .
Here is the hallway where the patients would walk up and down - in some cases, try to escape
Here is the hallway after the transformation into a series of shop windows
The patient is calm and comforted as she and nurse are seemingly out for a walk in the neighbourhood.
Here is a standard six bed room
During the project a similar six bed room is transformed into a kitchen where Alzheimer's patients can wash up after dinner
Or into a living room where they can sit and chat by the fire
The result was less medication and happier staff and calmer patients.
There has been much press recently about the care of elderly people suffering from dementia and Alzheimer's disease. While in Ireland I was part of a project that addressed challenging, and sometimes violent behaviour of patients, while at the same time easing the workload of clinical staff due to the constant attention required to care for this population. In addition, the medical units became reminders of the past with ambient lighting, fake fireplaces and a view created by a mural montage of surrounding nature.
The project was undertaken by Mount Carmel Hospital in Clonakilty County Cork, and saw the transformation medical wards into bedrooms, living rooms, a kitchen and garden. The medical units were renamed Saoirse which in the Irish language means Freedom, in the hopes of encouraging a more liberal approach to the regimental care, and in shifting attitudes of staff and family visitors. The women were encouraged to do what they had traditionally done such as wash dishes, mend trousers, and sit around a "fire" drinking tea and chatting. The men were encouraged to dress when they wanted rather than the required practice of 9 a.m. One male patient was allowed to sleep with his clothes on as he had been a farmer when he was younger and had never married. In several instances, once moved on Saoirse, there was a marked difference in patients who had been highly aggressive.
Rather than write more about it, let me show you some before and after shots . . . .
Here is the hallway where the patients would walk up and down - in some cases, try to escape
Here is the hallway after the transformation into a series of shop windows
The patient is calm and comforted as she and nurse are seemingly out for a walk in the neighbourhood.
Here is a standard six bed room
During the project a similar six bed room is transformed into a kitchen where Alzheimer's patients can wash up after dinner
Or into a living room where they can sit and chat by the fire
The result was less medication and happier staff and calmer patients.
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