14th April 2022
- Authors: Ananda Breed, Chaste Uwihoreye, Eric Ndushabandi, Matthew Elliott and Kirrily Pells
- Source: Journal of Applied Arts & Health, Volume 13,
Issue Art-Based Research in Health and Well-Being During the Pandemic, Mar 2022, p. 77 – 95 - DOI: https://doi.org/10.1386/jaah_00094_1
This article will provide an example of how the ‘Mobile Arts for Peace (MAP): Online psychosocial support through the arts in Rwanda’ project used digital art-based workshops to facilitate social and community cohesion and mental health provision. During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an increased need for psychosocial support due to the economic and social pressures of lockdown and yet many individuals had less access to mental health provision. While many mental health services around the world went online, there was still a gap between the Global South and Global North in terms of digital literacy, access to smart phones and computers, and the variation between psychosocial support through individual vs. collective healing alongside Indigenous and traditional vs. western psychosocial approaches. Implications for the use of art-based digital methods as a tool for mental health provision during and after the wake of the pandemic are explored.
Keywords: COVID-19, psychosocial, digital methods, Rwanda, mental health, applied performance