An Online Photovoice Study Designed by Researchers from Art and Social Work to Better Understand the Experience of Chronic Pain by Women of Color Cover Image

An Online Photovoice Study Designed by Researchers from Art and Social Work to Better Understand the Experience of Chronic Pain by Women of Color
An Online Photovoice Study Designed by Researchers from Art and Social Work to Better Understand the Experience of Chronic Pain by Women of Color

Author(s): Jane Prophet, Rahbel Rahman, Afton L. Hassett
Subject(s): Visual Arts, Aesthetics
Published by: Fakultet za medije i komunikacije - Univerzitet Singidunum
Keywords: Photovoice; arts-informed research; chronic pain; health equity

Summary/Abstract: In 1980s British feminist artist-photographer Jo Spence used phototherapy to challenge normative and medicalized constructions of the female cancer patient by documentingher illness and was then employed as a consultant by hospitals who, through her work, recognizedthe need to change physicians’ practices and attitudes, which objectified patients. Photovoice,a Community Based Participatory Design method where participants take photographs and combine them with short text narratives, is similar to Spence’s artistic method. It hasbeen used widely in health and social work settings. Healthcare professionals are aware of thepower of images as catalysts for meaning making in medical encounters with people in pain;as part of multidisciplinary analysis, because images can enhance a person’s sense of agency inrelation to their pain, especially in clinical contexts. Photographs can also establish a common ground for discussing meaning, therefore Photovoice can make the hidden experience of painvisible through collaborative photo-texts. These are subsequently shared with other patientsand healthcare workers to aid them in specialist consultations. However, few studies have addressed gender and race-related health disparities in treating chronic pain. This paper draws on the authors’ study with twenty women of color who created photo-text works about theirexperiences living with and being treated for chronic pain. In this novel online Photovoicestudy, participants engaged with asynchronous videos created by an artist-professor about themeanings viewers make of a photograph, including how perspective, angle, and lighting canaffect the viewer’s emotional response to photographs. Participants then deployed Photovoicethrough six synchronous sessions led by a social work professor with extensive experiencedesigning and facilitating Photovoice studies. The resulting image-text works by study participantsaddress health inequity and argue for health equity as a hallmark of social justice inhealthcare by focusing on exposing and reducing healthcare disparities.

  • Issue Year: 2023
  • Issue No: 32
  • Page Range: 69-89
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: English
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