A Social Experiment for Manifesting and Sharing Illness Experiences:
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- SAKAI Shiori
- College of Nursing and Nutrition, Shukutoku University
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- HOSONO Tomoko
- Faculty of Nursing, Japanese Red Cross College of Nursing
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- KOBAYASHI Michitaro
- Faculty of Nursing, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University
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- SAKAKIBARA Tetsuya
- School of Arts and Sciences, Tokyo Woman's Christian University
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- FUKUI Satomi
- Faculty of Health Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University
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- SUGIBAYASHI Minoru
- Department of Psychiatry, Aijinkai Healthcare Corporation, Takatsuki General Hospital
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- KIKUCHI Mayumi
- Faculty of Nursing, Toho University
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- TAKATA Yoshinori
- Saitama Faculty of Nursing, Japanese Red Cross College of Nursing
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- 病い経験の可視化・共有化の社会的実験
- Through the Development and Implementation of the “Iki–iki Café” Program with Local Resident Participation
- 地域住民参加型「生き活きカフェ」プログラムの開発実践
Abstract
This paper reports on the development and practice of the “Iki–iki–Café” program, which is a new social experimental method for creating a temporary space enabling individuals to communicate openly about their experiences with various illnesses. Moreover, the paper explores the possibilities of sharing such stories. The Iki–iki–Café consists of two main sections. The first section encourages participants to listen to a guest speaker talk about “my experience of illness,” following which they are divided into small groups to discuss their own experiences. The second section instructs participants to jot down several interesting phrases on the boards. Five “cafés” were conducted, with each consisting of approximately 20 participants. Responses to the follow–up questionnaire revealed that the participants underwent positive conversations. Through their conversation, they redefined the meaning of their illness. Later, researchers prepared a daily calendar that included 31 phrases from the boards used in the second section, and more than 500 copies of the calendar were distributed to local residents. Several users responded that they felt connected to others who underwent illnesses through the calendar.
Journal
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- Japanese Journal of Qualitative Psychology
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Japanese Journal of Qualitative Psychology 20 (Special), S180-S187, 2021
Japanese Association of Qualitative Psychology
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390855035383654528
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- ISSN
- 24357065
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed