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Feeling better: sensory rooms in an inpatient psychiatric unit

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 20:35 authored by Ekashanti Sumartojo, Sarah Pink, Lisa Spong, Laurene VaughanLaurene Vaughan
The use of sensory or 'comfort' rooms in the care of acute psychiatric patients is an area of growing interest and research, often concerned with their efficacy in helping patients to self-soothe or in reducing rates of patient seclusion or restrictive intervention (Novak et al. 2012, Champagne and Stronmberg 2004). However, it is still not well understood how patients and clinical staff make sense of the sensory elements of these rooms and the items within them, what feelings and affects they engender and how this might link sensory experience with material objects and built spaces. In this paper we draw on sensory ethnography (Pink 2015) to examine patients' narratives and demonstrations of how their experiences of and activity in sensory rooms or with portable sensory items lead to them 'feeling better', and the processes that staff engage in when seeking to enable these experiences. In doing so, we analyse the recent introduction of sensory rooms in a regional hospital in Australia, and the imagined development of these for a new hospital site. We draw on a recent ethnographic study in a psychiatric services unit to explore aspects of the use and experience of these spaces, from two distinct perspectives. First, we analyse how patients and clinical staff use the existing sensory rooms, and how patients are encouraged to select and utilise particular items to create particular sensations and affects. Second, in the context of a planning a new, purpose-built facility, we discuss how the use of the future rooms was imagined and informed choices about the design, location and items within the rooms. By discussing how staff and patients both experienced the existing sensory rooms and how they imagined and planned for the new ones, we will explore how the health and well-being of hospitalised psychiatric patients is ongoingly constituted and imagined in relation to material and sensory environments.

History

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  1. 1.
    ISBN - Is published in 9788793585003 (urn:isbn:9788793585003)
  2. 2.

Start page

121

End page

133

Total pages

13

Outlet

Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Architecture, Research, Care and Health

Editors

N. Mathiasen and A. K. Frandsen

Name of conference

ARCH17: the 3rd International Conference on Architecture, Research, Care and Health

Publisher

Polyteknisk forlag

Place published

Denmark

Start date

2017-04-26

End date

2017-04-27

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006074130

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-06-13

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