Taming predators through photography |
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Authors: | Juha Suonpää |
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Institution: | Researcher in the department of photography , University of Art and Design, (UIAH) , Helsinki |
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Abstract: | In this article we examine an innovative application of visual communication and social science methods, moving the study of indigenous media from the purely academic realm into pediatric health research. Through Video Intervention/Prevention Assessment (VIA), children and adolescents who share a medical condition create visual narratives of their lives with chronic disease to show and tell their illness experiences to health care providers. Clinicians routinely plan medical management with limited knowledge of how patients interact with disease in their “real life” physical, psychological, and social environments. VIA asks young patients to teach clinicians the realities of day‐to‐day life with illness, yielding unique insights that can guide the development of more realistic, more humane, and ultimately more effective medical care. We describe the VIA methodology, a pilot study of asthma, and the illness experiences shown and told by VIA Asthma participants. Not only did VIA generate useful research findings, it also produced visual documents of the child's illness experience that can serve as tools for influencing policy, advocating for patients, and educating health care providers, patients, and their families. |
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