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  • I am going to speak in English today,

  • but I hope this is not a problem.

  • If it is a problem just raise your hand,

  • and we will immediately speak only in Spanish.

  • (Laughter)

  • (Applause)

  • No one is raising their hand yet, so

  • "Humor in Healthcare."

  • Someone is raising their hand already.

  • (Laughter)

  • I imagine that everyone in this room remembers a time

  • when it was impossible to put those two words,

  • humor and healthcare,

  • in the same sentence.

  • Today,

  • humor and healthcare is an idea worth sharing.

  • I'd like to start with my personal experience

  • I had here in the Czech Republic.

  • About 15 years ago,

  • I had just started presenting this idea of humor in healthcare

  • at healthcare conferences,

  • and I was running all over the country like a mad man

  • visiting hospitals as a clown.

  • One of my studies was clowning.

  • I studied at the first accredited clown school in America.

  • (Laughter)

  • Like I said, it is not my fault.

  • (Laughter)

  • I was presenting this idea

  • in hospitals, in children's wards, all over the country.

  • I would come in a hospital

  • and the first thing I would do is have a consultation with the staff

  • to get some basic information on the patients that were there,

  • [the staff] that would help me in my work.

  • I was talking with the doctor

  • in the oncology ward of this hospital,

  • and he was telling me things I needed to know.

  • And then he said: "Oh, and there is Melissa in room 4."

  • I changed her name by the way.

  • "There is Melissa in room 4,

  • but unfortunately,

  • the therapy did not work,

  • and she's in the last stages of the disease,

  • and her bodily functions are shutting down.

  • So she cannot see anymore,

  • and I doubt that she would even know

  • if you were present or not.

  • So probably, it does not really make sense to visit her."

  • And I said, "Can I try?" And he said, "Yes, of course."

  • So I continued my visit to the oncology ward

  • there were actually two wards, younger and older children

  • and three, four hours later,

  • I was left with one room left,

  • and that was room number 4 and Melissa.

  • So I knocked on the door.

  • No answer.

  • I opened the door slightly and asked if I could come in.

  • I saw Melissa lying in bed, staring blindly at the ceiling;

  • she had lost all her hair through treatment.

  • Her mother was sitting next to her, wringing her hands,

  • obviously in a lot of stress.

  • So I asked if I could come in and her mother said yes.

  • So I came in,

  • and I started clowning for Melissa.

  • Because she did not see, I was forced to use sounds.

  • One of the things that happened was

  • and I never knew what was going to happen

  • we found a bird in the room.

  • (Imitating bird chirping)

  • Melissa liked that.

  • We decided that we should catch this bird,

  • and it was Melissa's idea to put it out of the window.

  • I was racing around the room trying to catch this bird.

  • I did finally catch the bird.

  • I caught it under her bed

  • and put it in a plastic bag

  • (imitating wing flapping)

  • and opened the window and let it fly.

  • But then it flew right back in.

  • (Laughter)

  • (More bird chirping)

  • This went on and on, and we could not get rid of this bird.

  • Finally, Melissa and I

  • she was really enjoying this, she was laughing

  • and we were having a real good time

  • finally decided that the bird would live under her bed.

  • (Laughter)

  • This was our decision together,

  • and so the bird finally lived under Melissa's bed.

  • At the end, I picked up my ukulele, and I sang a little song

  • about the bird that lived under Melissa's bed.

  • (Laughter)

  • And I left the room.

  • I left the room

  • with Melissa in bed smiling,

  • and there was a very nice atmosphere.

  • And as the door closed, it opened again immediately,

  • and her mother was chasing me into the foyer of the hospital

  • trying to give me money,

  • tears streaming down her face.

  • Of course I had to say no.

  • What I had just received in that room

  • was worth all the money in the world.

  • What happened in the room

  • was that Melissa and I understood the game,

  • and her mother was completely surprised.

  • She probably saw this as, maybe,

  • the last time she would see her daughter smile and laugh.

  • I don't know, but she was very emotionally charged.

  • I went on my way,

  • — I was continually visiting hospitals all over the country

  • so it took some time before I came back to this hospital.

  • I don't know how many weeks, a month, I don't know.

  • I came back into the same oncology ward,

  • and I was met with the doctor on duty,

  • and he said: "Gary, do you remember Melissa in room 4?

  • I said yes and I knew what was coming.

  • I had lost patients many times.

  • I knew what was coming, so I was half-listening

  • as the doctor was telling me that Melissa, after my visit,

  • had turned 180 degrees.

  • All of her bodily functions had returned.

  • There was no trace of the illness, and they had sent her home.

  • I know what spontaneous remission means;

  • I did not see this necessarily as a [result] of my visit.

  • But that moment

  • gave me the resolve to continue with this work.

  • And today, here in the Czech Republic,

  • there are 87 specially trained certified health clowns

  • visiting over 75 hospitals and institutions,

  • on a regular basis,

  • at least once a week, up to seven times a week.

  • We make more than 3,500 visits a year here in the Czech Republic.

  • In the meantime,

  • I was honored to be able to open a project in Slovakia.

  • Now I work with

  • "Red Noses Clowndoctors International,"

  • whose mission is to develop and to guide

  • humor in healthcare projects worldwide.

  • One of the things we do

  • is we have developed a certification process, a curriculum,

  • which involves all of the things

  • these specially trained artists need to know

  • to do this work correctly.

  • We have an international school of humor in Vienna

  • where partners can come and get

  • the best training in the world.

  • We believe

  • that approaching this project in a professional manner

  • is really what it takes.

  • Just like other people working in healthcare,

  • we see it as very important to put energy into the training process.

  • Red Noses Clowndoctors is also advocating for child's rights.

  • The right to play, specifically.

  • We all know that play is an important part of the development process for children.

  • In hospitals they also recognize this.

  • So, what you will see in children's wards quite often are playrooms,

  • but this is not inclusive for all children in the hospital.

  • Consider children who must stay in bed;

  • they are not allowed into the playroom,

  • so that is where our clowns come in.

  • They bring this atmosphere of play,

  • the possibility to play

  • and the expertise

  • to draw the children into this play mode

  • right to the children's bedside.

  • We work individually with children of all ages

  • they are specially trained to work with children of all ages

  • and we work individually with each child.

  • We use the hospital procedures and the environment

  • and make fun of it.

  • Nurses and doctors love it as well, believe me.

  • (Laughter)

  • By doing this,

  • we get around the mystique.

  • If the child can laugh about a procedure, he will not be afraid of it.

  • So our clowns are specially trained

  • to work with children on an individual basis.

  • (Laughter)

  • As you can see, they are very empathetic.

  • (Laughter)

  • Children's programs are the basis of our work,

  • but we do work with other age groups.

  • We have

  • a project called Circus Patientus

  • where we work an entire week with children,

  • in civil, without the clown nose,

  • teaching circus arts, and magic,

  • and music.

  • These are things that children are readily interested in.

  • And I believe

  • that if we can awaken an interest in whatsoever,

  • then we awaken an interest in life,

  • and interest in life is an integral part of the healthcare process.

  • So Circus Patientus is a process

  • where they learn something new,

  • they become interested in things,

  • and they become the stars at the end of the day.

  • We even have circus tents set up on the hospital grounds,

  • which is very inviting for children in hospitals.

  • They are the big stars of the show.

  • Audience includes their parents, hospital staff, other children.

  • Besides children, we also have developed projects working with the elderly.

  • Because actually last year I reached retirement age,

  • (Laughter)

  • I do not want to be in an institution

  • where there are not clowns visiting on a regular basis.

  • (Laughter)

  • So we have developed humor for the early born.

  • (Laughter)

  • And quite often this is exactly what they need,

  • they need to be brought back into life.

  • It is a completely different method.

  • Clowns that do this project are trained specifically for this project.

  • We use old costumes, 50-year-old costumes,

  • we sing the old songs.

  • A lot of it has to do with memory training.

  • Picking mushrooms is very popular in the Czech Republic,

  • so in the autumn we would come in with a basket of mushrooms,

  • just to smell it, to remember.

  • It is a beautiful project.

  • We also have many other projects.

  • Caravan Orchestra is a special scenario built

  • for the multiple handicapped children in institutions.

  • We have the Humor Baskets project for adults.

  • I have seen magic work with this.

  • I have seen waiting rooms in an adult oncology ward;

  • and you can imagine what the atmosphere is like.

  • We have come in with these humor baskets,

  • and the whole thing is changed into almost a Christmas atmosphere,

  • where somebody says: "This is a great book, I read this,"

  • and somebody says, "I read this, so let's change."

  • We had some real magic moments.

  • And just lately, one of the last projects I was able to do here,

  • for the Zdravotní Klaun project here and also the project in Slovakia

  • was to introduce something I had seen in Israel.

  • Clowns, specially trained for this, accompany children

  • from the hospital ward to the operating theater.

  • We call it 'NOS, ' (Czech) "To the operation room."

  • What I have realized is

  • there are specific stress moments in this process,

  • so the clowns are trained

  • to interject humor at these stress moments.

  • If you could imagine being a parentthis is not just for the children

  • and this moment when your child is wheeled through the operation room

  • and the door is close and you are left outside.

  • Can you imagine what a stress moment that is?

  • The clowns are also specially trained to work with parents in these situations.

  • They may take the nose off

  • and just be a human being when a human being is needed.

  • When I introduced this project, I was met with some skepticism,

  • but after the three-month pilot period,

  • I had nothing but positive feedback,

  • so we are expanding the project even further.

  • Humor isn't international.

  • (Laughter)

  • Red Noses Clowndoctors International were invited to speak at conferences

  • in Saudi Arabia.

  • This is a picture taken in the hospital

  • with the head of the pediatric ward.

  • When I first started helping to develop a project in Palestine,

  • I thought: "Wow, the clown

  • is not an element in their culture",

  • but they learned; now they know.

  • We found that they understood immediately

  • and went with us wholeheartedly.

  • We worked very closely with the hospital staff

  • this is something I find very important.

  • How I see our work specifically

  • is that we are complement to the fine work

  • that other hospital professionals are doing.

  • And in that vein, I've also worked with medical students,

  • teaching humor and healthcare

  • as a communication tool,

  • how to better a relationship with the patient,

  • and I have worked with the Czech Association of Nurses

  • to teach accredited seminars for nurses

  • because I really believe, not that they are clowns,

  • but they can use humor in their work.

  • So we talked about types of humor relative to healthcare,

  • the developmental stages of understanding humor in children,

  • we talked about fear, about focus.

  • For instance, if I was to take a blood sample,

  • and health professionals focus on their work, and that's normal

  • so if I am to take a blood sample, may I?

  • Just stay seated -

  • The focus is here, where the procedure takes place,

  • but that is not necessarily convenient for the patient.

  • So what I do is introduce some other ideas.

  • May I see your other hand? Just one finger.

  • Now I am going to take a blood sample

  • (Laughter)

  • I am going to take a blood sample,

  • and your job is to make sure the bird stays flying.

  • (Laughter)

  • Keep it going.

  • (Laughter)

  • Just about... Got it!

  • (Applause)

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

  • Good job.

  • So we do work together with the hospital staff;

  • this is very important.

  • It is interesting that there are so many hospital wards now

  • which realize

  • that a ward without humor intervention can't work.

  • Things have changed that much in the last 15, 20 years,

  • and what it tells us in the global picture

  • is that healthcare is changing,

  • that healthcare is becoming more humane

  • and more aware of the psychosocial needs of the patients.

  • And that is something to smile about.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

I am going to speak in English today,

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TEDx】醫療衛生領域的幽默感|Gary Edwards|TEDxBrno (【TEDx】Humor in healthcare | Gary Edwards | TEDxBrno)

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    SylviaQQ posted on 2021/01/14
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