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“Sketch and Talk” —Getting Closer To Patients’ Lived experiences Of Their Care Environment In Institutions For Care and Incarceration Passed

Thursday May 16, 2024 10:30 - 10:45 G1

Moderator: Emma Forsgren
Presenter: Franz James

Track: Art, Media, and Performance

This presentation will primarily focus on the development and application of the method “Sketch and Talk” in which ethnographic and visual methods are used to get closer to patients’ and clients’ lived experience of their care environment. “Sketch and Talk” uses sketching and talking when meeting a participant in their cell or room as a way of creating a space for mutual observation and understanding of the interior (James, 2017). The method has been developed in research in institutions of care and incarceration (ICI), that is, prisons, special residential youth homes and forensic psychiatric hospitals. In these closed environments there are limitations to which research methods and tools that can be used. An awareness and respect for vulnerable groups as well as security is key to determine how the researcher can learn how personal stories of the dialectic relationship design, materiality, functionality and people’s experience of space, body, time and relations. ICIs are understood as an existential and ethical dichotomy with well-being on the one hand and the losses that incarceration brings on the other. The tension between punishment and (re)habilitation manifests through materiality, design, and high-security measures. However, the question for design in these environments is not whether it is possible to hinder the pain and losses that come with incarceration but how design can mitigate these losses, alleviate pain, foster well-being, and assist staff through a safe and supportive work environment (James, 2023). The findings suggest that future research can contribute with more knowledge on how an interior can promote well-being through design for autonomy, dwelling, and movement and as a result can open up new horizons of change and hope. 

Language

English

Seminar type

Pre-recorded + On-site

Lecture type

Art

Conference

GCPCC

Authors

Franz James

Lecturers

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Emma Forsgren Moderator

Researcher
University of Gothenburg

Emma has as Master of Science in Speech and Language Pathology and is a Doctor of Philosophy in Medical Science.

Currently employed as a Researcher and Project lead for education and utilisation of research within Gothenburg Centre for Person-Centred Care (GPCC), at the Institute of Health and Care Sciences, Sahlgrenska academy, University of Gothenburg.

Franz James Presenter

HDK-Valand, University of Gothenburg