3 research outputs found
Psychodrama and moviemaking in a death education course to work through a case of suicide among high school students in Italy
This study describes the psychological effects of an experience of death education
(DE) used to explore a case of suicide in an Italian high school. DE activities included
philosophical and religious perspectives of the relationships between death and the
meaning of life, a visit to a local hospice, and psychodrama activities, which culminated
in the production of short movies. The intervention involved 268 high school students
(138 in the experimental group). Pre-test and post-test measures assessed ontological
representations of death, death anxiety, alexithymia, and meaning in life. Results
confirmed that, in the experimental group, death anxiety was significantly reduced as
much as the representation of death as annihilation and alexithymia, while a sense of
spirituality and the meaning of life were more enhanced, compared to the No DE group.
These improvements in the positive meaning of life and the reduction of anxiety confirmed
that it is possible to manage trauma and grief at school with death education interventions
that include religious discussion, psychodrama and movie making activities
Reconstructing Social Relationships in a Post-Lockdown Suburban Area of Southern Italy Using Pastoral Counselling
UIDB/00472/2020 UIDP/00472/2020The growing interest in spirituality has enabled numerous avenues of pastoral counselling support, which can be a useful resource for improving quality of life in the context of significant social deprivation. The aim of this research was to investigate the role of the spiritual dimension of pastoral support interventions created to help the inhabitants of a strongly deprived territory in Southern Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Eight people between the ages of 28 and 67 took part in the study. A qualitative research design was applied via online interviews with the participants, who were operators of a pastoral counselling service located on the outskirts of a suburban town. The main emergent themes were the importance of religiosity and spirituality in the lives of the participants, the role that these two aspects play in the lives of those who carry out activities devoted to helping others, and the ways in which these dimensions are used within support programmes responding to the needs of an area characterized by socioeconomic and psychosocial problems. The interviews revealed how pastoral counselling can be useful in situations of stress in highly deprived areas.publishersversionepub_ahead_of_prin
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<p>This study describes the psychological effects of an experience of death education (DE) used to explore a case of suicide in an Italian high school. DE activities included philosophical and religious perspectives of the relationships between death and the meaning of life, a visit to a local hospice, and psychodrama activities, which culminated in the production of short movies. The intervention involved 268 high school students (138 in the experimental group). Pre-test and post-test measures assessed ontological representations of death, death anxiety, alexithymia, and meaning in life. Results confirmed that, in the experimental group, death anxiety was significantly reduced as much as the representation of death as annihilation and alexithymia, while a sense of spirituality and the meaning of life were more enhanced, compared to the No DE group. These improvements in the positive meaning of life and the reduction of anxiety confirmed that it is possible to manage trauma and grief at school with death education interventions that include religious discussion, psychodrama and movie making activities.</p