To Jurassic Park via Australia: A case study showing how dramatherapy enabled the creation and maintenance of embodied metaphors to support recovery from early psychosis

This case study shows how Dramatherapy can engage clients with communication difficulties, which exclude them from standard mental health pathways in early intervention in psychosis services. Deliberately prioritising the client’s newfound modes of expression to shape the narrative within, it is evi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Dramatherapy : the journal of the Association for Dramatherapists 2020-04, Vol.41 (1), p.37-49
Hauptverfasser: Combes, Louise, A Bradley, Lauren
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container_title Dramatherapy : the journal of the Association for Dramatherapists
container_volume 41
creator Combes, Louise
A Bradley, Lauren
description This case study shows how Dramatherapy can engage clients with communication difficulties, which exclude them from standard mental health pathways in early intervention in psychosis services. Deliberately prioritising the client’s newfound modes of expression to shape the narrative within, it is evident Dramatherapy processes; embodiment, projection and role enabled this client to create and then inhabit his own playful metaphors. These metaphors continued to facilitate every-day life challenges. During his Dramatherapy relationship, the client within this case study transitioned from supported accommodation to his own property, progressed to residential rehabilitation for alcohol misuse and finally engaged in cognitive behavioural therapy. From feedback interviews we know he continued to create and use his own protective metaphors 10 months after drama therapy ended. He returned to education as part of his plan to seek appropriate employment and was discharged to his GP.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/02630672211002791
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identifier ISSN: 0263-0672
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Arts
dramatherapy
early
embodiment
intervention
metaphor
projection
psychosis
role
title To Jurassic Park via Australia: A case study showing how dramatherapy enabled the creation and maintenance of embodied metaphors to support recovery from early psychosis
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