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Media contact

Michaela Turner
ADA Innovation Hub
0427467220
m.turner@unsw.edu.au

A new festival is prioritising the wellbeing of healthcare workers in hospitals in Sydney鈥檚 Southeast. The Festival of Care is bringing creative arts-based interventions to the Sydney and Sydney Eye Hospital (12-14 September) and Randwick Campus (Prince of Wales Hospital, Mental Health Services and Royal Hospital for Women, 15-22 September) to help staff reduce stress and to recognise their contribution and dedication.

The festival, previously held at St George and Sutherland Hospitals, provides a 鈥榯aster鈥 of experiential tools to help frontline health workers manage anxiety, trauma and burnout in the wake of COVID-19, says project co-lead Scientia Professor Jill Bennett, Director聽of the聽Big Anxiety Research Centre聽(BARC) at 国产精品.聽

鈥淎rts-based recovery or wellbeing therapies are often used for patient care; the Festival of Care explores ways to introduce and embed arts-based care within hospitals to enhance the psychosocial wellbeing of staff,鈥 says the Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow.

The program includes welcome events, 鈥榓wkward conversations鈥, artists in residence, ambient live music, virtual reality (VR) for wellbeing, interactive musical experiences and hands-on workshops. 鈥淚t looks at ways to start conversations as well as provide connections to further support through an experience that is stimulating and enjoyable and inherently relaxing,鈥 she says.

A research-driven initiative

The Festival of Care is a 国产精品 ADA Innovation Hub project in partnership with BARC and the 聽 (SESLHD). The Innovation Hub is a project-based collaborative problem-solving initiative led by 国产精品 design academic Dr Carly Vickers.

The festival is an example of how the Innovation Hub partners with government and industry to promote positive change, and provides ADA鈥檚 researchers, centres and institutes with new opportunities to build on their research impact.

鈥淭he festival is evidence-driven, co-designed by 国产精品 designers, researchers and creative practitioners with SESLHD leaders and Wellbeing Ambassadors,鈥 says project co-lead Professor Michael Balfour, an expert in applied theatre and performance work within social contexts.

鈥淐onnecting with government and industry, through the Innovation Hub, has created fertile interdisciplinary exchanges that both ground the research and deliver real-world change.鈥

Festival of Care choir

The Festival of Care creates spaces within the hospital environment that offer light-touch engagements from brightly coloured totems to music, art and virtual reality experiences. Photo: Supplied.

Seizing the moment

The festival encourages staff to 鈥榩ause and engage鈥 within their busy healthcare environments. 鈥淧eople are there to work. They might have five or ten minutes, they might be on their way somewhere, they might already be stressed, so the focus is on immediate, accessible and fun activities that provoke curiosity,鈥 Prof. Bennett says.

鈥淭here are curated ambient interventions that permeate the space and transform the environment, and light-touch engagements, and opportunities for interaction that people can return to later for a deeper engagement.鈥

The high-pressure environments of hospitals mean having opportunities to share experiences is important, she says. 鈥淥ur awkward conversations program allows people to have 15-minute one-to-one conversations with our team of trained listeners. It makes conversation accessible without people having to contend with the barriers associated with seeking help.鈥

These awkward conversationalists come from art, psychology and counselling backgrounds, making them adept at managing authentic discussions of hard-to-tackle issues, such as depression, work-place stress and complex life issues, she says.

Transforming spaces

The hospital environment is transformed through a series of sculptures, or totems, designed by 国产精品 design academic Katherine Bond and fabricated within ADA鈥檚聽 using recycled plastics, including expired hospital scrubs, in line with circular design principles.

鈥淭he totems contribute vibrant colour and textural complexity to create an uplifting atmosphere within the healthcare environment. Their subtle manipulation of space promotes new experiences and invites engagement with the festival鈥檚 program content,鈥 says Ms Bond, the festival鈥檚 lead spatial and experience designer.

Hospital staff can also access , a ten-minute experiential VR program designed by Prof. Bennett鈥檚 team that allows users to explore and map their feelings through their body. The program is used extensively in support contexts, such as schools, refugee programs and patient care, to alleviate stress, anxiety and trauma. Its inclusion in the festival reminds us of the need to care for our carers and ourselves, she says.

鈥淗ealth professionals, perhaps more than most people, often neglect their own health and wellbeing in the process of focusing on others in their professional roles,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o providing an outlet [for them to explore their thoughts and emotions] can be really important.鈥

Festival of Care VR square pic

Embodimap is a ten-minute experiential VR program that allows users to explore and map their feelings through their body. "Its inclusion in the festival reminds us of the need to care for our carers and ourselves," says Prof. Bennett. Photo: Supplied.

Getting creative about wellbeing

Engaging with art and creativity allows us to reflect on feelings of stress, distress and emotional dysregulation; it creates mindful opportunities that can refocus and relax people, says Prof. Bennett. 鈥淭hen, on top of that, we have these very specific tools which go deeper, which are informed by therapeutic practice,鈥 she says.

鈥淏ut they still operate in this vein of creative enquiry, really enabling people to understand processes that are hard to talk about and conceptualise, let alone shift.鈥

The collaborative dimension of the program is significant; 鈥渙ften coming out of yourself and finding a connection with other people is really important,鈥 she says. For example, in 鈥楳ake your Mark鈥, designed and facilitated by 国产精品 design academic Chloe Cassidy, staff are invited to 鈥榤ake a mark鈥 or an individual artwork; these artworks are then digitally combined to create a collective mural for installation within each hospital.

鈥淪imple acts of self-agency, such as creating art, can help people reach a state of active calm that helps with self-regulation and healing from trauma,鈥 says Ms Cassidy who specialises in practice-based interventions for trauma-informed care.

Making space for difficult conversations

The festival also revives an in-depth theatre project on mental health and suicide, , codesigned with junior doctors and nursing staff at the inaugural Big Anxiety Festival in 2017. 鈥淎t the Festival of Care, it provides a framework for having difficult conversations about mental health, toxic workplaces and other related issues within a workshop environment,鈥 says Prof. Bennett.

The festival opens up the potential for ongoing projects for psychosocial wellbeing within hospitals in line with BARC鈥檚 more sustained work transforming the impacts of trauma on communities. The centre places lived experience at the core of its research, creative practice and design through projects, such as and .

It aligns with the commitment of SESLHD to enhance the health and wellbeing of staff. 鈥淎s we emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic, our staff in healthcare facilities continue to experience workplace pressure and stress,鈥 says Chief Executive Tobi Wilson from SESLHD. 鈥淭he Festival of Care enables our people to find creative ways to support their wellbeing at work.鈥

The Festival of Care project and the ADA Innovation Hub more broadly align with the 国产精品 ADA2051 strategy to leverage faculty knowledge and skills to create a future that is sustainable, connected, healthy and socially just for all.聽

鈥淭he Festival of Care stands testament to the rich contribution that collaborations across education, research and healthcare organisations can make to the broader community,鈥 says Professor Claire Annesley, Dean of 国产精品 Arts, Design & Architecture.

鈥淲orking in concert with NSW Health and NSW Government, we鈥檙e promoting transformative, research-driven change to support positive health outcomes and more sustainable wellbeing.鈥

The Festival of Care will be running at the Sydney and Sydney Eye Hospital (12-14) and Randwick Campus (15-22) over the month of September for SESLHD staff only. Big Anxiety Research Centre will be running an from October 2-13, showcasing its projects to the public, as part of the opening of the 国产精品 Health Translation Hub at The Bank on 国产精品鈥檚 Kensington Campus.