Understanding Youth's Lived Experience of Anxiety through Metaphors: A Qualitative, Arts-Based Study

被引:21
|
作者
Woodgate, Roberta Lynn [1 ]
Tennent, Pauline [1 ]
Legras, Nicole [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manitoba, Rady Fac Hlth Sci, Coll Nursing, 89 Curry Pl, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, Canada
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
youth; mental illness; anxiety; depression; metaphors; qualitative research; arts-based research methods; open-ended interviews; photovoice; ecomaps; ADOLESCENT MENTAL-DISORDERS; DEPRESSION; PHOTOVOICE; CHILDREN; LANGUAGE; HEALTH; PERSPECTIVES; RECOVERY; CONVENTIONALITY; PHENOMENOLOGY;
D O I
10.3390/ijerph18084315
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Living with anxiety can be a complex, biopsychosocial experience that is unique to each person and embedded in their contexts and lived worlds. Scales and questionnaires are necessary to quantify anxiety, yet these approaches are not always able to reflect the lived experience of psychological distress experienced by youth. Guided by hermeneutic phenomenology, our research aimed to amplify the voices of youth living with anxiety. Fifty-eight youth living with anxiety took part in in-depth, open-ended interviews and participatory arts-based methods (photovoice and ecomaps). Analysis was informed by van Manen's method of data analysis with attention to lived space, lived body, lived time, and lived relationships, as well as the meanings of living with anxiety. Youth relied on the following metaphors to describe their experiences: A shrinking world; The heavy, heavy backpack; Play, pause, rewind, forward; and A fine balance. Overall, youth described their anxiety as a monster, contributing to feelings of fear, loss, and pain, but also hope. The findings from this study can contribute to the reduction of barriers in knowledge translation by encouraging the use of narrative and visual metaphors as a communicative tool to convey youth's lived experience of anxiety to researchers, clinicians, and the public.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The lived experience of anxiety and the many facets of pain: A qualitative, arts-based approach
    Woodgate, Roberta Lynn
    Tennent, Pauline
    Barriage, Sarah
    Legras, Nicole
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PAIN-REVUE CANADIENNE DE LA DOULEUR, 2020, 4 (03): : 6 - 18
  • [2] Review of arts-based therapies for Canadian youth with lived experience of mental illness
    Boekhoven, Belinda
    Bowker, Anne
    Davidson, Simon
    Cacciato, Angelina
    Gray, Barb
    VULNERABLE CHILDREN AND YOUTH STUDIES, 2012, 7 (02) : 164 - 173
  • [3] Understanding public perceptions of healing: An arts-based qualitative study
    Rahtz, Emmylou
    Warber, Sara L.
    Dieppe, Paul
    COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES IN MEDICINE, 2019, 45 : 25 - 32
  • [4] Understanding Men's Lived Experience of Mental Distress Through Metaphors
    Mckenzie, Sarah K.
    Mathieson, Fiona
    Das, Tiara
    Genuchi, Matthew C.
    Oliffe, John L.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MENS HEALTH, 2024, 18 (03)
  • [5] Metaphors in the Making: Illuminating the Process of Arts-Based Health Research Through a Case Exemplar Linking Arts-Based, Qualitative and Quantitative Research Data
    Archibald, Mandy
    Blines, John
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, 2021, 20
  • [6] The lived experience of surviving from the Islamic State attack and capture in Iraq and Syria: An arts-based qualitative study with Yazidi young women
    Abdulah, Deldar Morad
    Abdulla, Bayar Mohammed Omar
    Liamputtong, Pranee
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 69 (01) : 117 - 133
  • [7] Narratives of health and illness: Arts-based research capturing the lived experience of dementia
    Moss, Hilary
    O'Neill, Desmond
    DEMENTIA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2019, 18 (06): : 2008 - 2017
  • [9] Arts-Based Learning Strategies in Clinical Postconference: A Qualitative Study
    Lutter, Stacy L.
    Pucino, Carrie L.
    Jarecke, Jodi L.
    JOURNAL OF NURSING EDUCATION, 2018, 57 (09) : 549 - 553
  • [10] Sense making through poem houses: an arts-based approach to understanding leadership
    Grisoni, Louise
    Collins, Brigid
    VISUAL STUDIES, 2012, 27 (01) : 35 - 47