Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter (peer-reviewed) › peer-review
Art Therapy’s contribution to alleviating the HIV burden in South Africa. / Berman, Hayley; Woollett, Nataly.
Routledge Handbook of Art Therapy in Hospice and Bereavement Care. ed. / Michele JM Wood; Rebecca Jacobson. New York : Taylor & Francis, 2019.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter (peer-reviewed) › peer-review
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - Art Therapy’s contribution to alleviating the HIV burden in South Africa.
AU - Berman, Hayley
AU - Woollett, Nataly
PY - 2019/6/1
Y1 - 2019/6/1
N2 - South Africa carries one of the world’s most prevalent burdens of disease, HIV. Living surrounded by so much illness and death and against an historical backdrop of violence and poverty, many young people have had multiple exposures to trauma and bereavement with little opportunity to grieve and recover. One of the many tragedies in South Africa is a deficit of parental figures to provide containment, safety and a space for processing complex trauma and complicated grief. At present there are insufficient therapeutic resources to meet the depth and breadth of need. Many of the existing psychosocial practitioners, while facilitating courageous and extraordinary projects, have inadequate training and are often traumatized themselves. Two art psychotherapists, one having worked within a community art therapy centre, the other in the public health system, outline the psychosocial context in which many young South Africans are raised. They describe an experiential art therapy group with HIV counsellors with the primary objective of becoming ‘surrogate parents’, enabling their capacity to work more effectively and creatively with groups, increasing their propensity for empathy, being able to receive emotional support, as well as encouraging group cohesion with increased productivity.
AB - South Africa carries one of the world’s most prevalent burdens of disease, HIV. Living surrounded by so much illness and death and against an historical backdrop of violence and poverty, many young people have had multiple exposures to trauma and bereavement with little opportunity to grieve and recover. One of the many tragedies in South Africa is a deficit of parental figures to provide containment, safety and a space for processing complex trauma and complicated grief. At present there are insufficient therapeutic resources to meet the depth and breadth of need. Many of the existing psychosocial practitioners, while facilitating courageous and extraordinary projects, have inadequate training and are often traumatized themselves. Two art psychotherapists, one having worked within a community art therapy centre, the other in the public health system, outline the psychosocial context in which many young South Africans are raised. They describe an experiential art therapy group with HIV counsellors with the primary objective of becoming ‘surrogate parents’, enabling their capacity to work more effectively and creatively with groups, increasing their propensity for empathy, being able to receive emotional support, as well as encouraging group cohesion with increased productivity.
M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)
BT - Routledge Handbook of Art Therapy in Hospice and Bereavement Care
A2 - JM Wood, Michele
A2 - Jacobson, Rebecca
PB - Taylor & Francis
CY - New York
ER -