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Art
Centre for Positive Ageing
  • Centre for Positive Ageing
  • 04 February 2018
  • Blog

How can art improve health for older people?

How much does participation in the arts have a positive impact on people’s health and wellbeing, in particular for people living with dementia?

What is wellbeing?

Wellbeing, as described by the World Health Organization (WHO), is “a state of physical, mental and social wellness; a way of life that equips the individual to realise the full potential of their capabilities and to overcome and compensate for weakness”.

The arts can play an important role in wellbeing, as HammondCare has discovered though our Arts Engagement in Hospitals program. Created by the Centre for Positive Aging, Arts Engagement in Hospitals brings together music, dance and the visual arts to help older people improve their physical and mental wellbeing.

The program is fun, engaging and practical. Experienced artists work with small groups to help participants explore their own creativity and learn new skills, while at the same time focusing on specific health and wellness needs.

“This program has brought me back to life again. It has helped me get over my grief and loneliness. Socially, it was marvellous. It has released me to be me.”
Dorothy
Arts Engagement in Hospitals participant

Benefits of participatory art

Some of the main benefits of participating in art, as found by our Centre for Positive Aging team in collaboration with research conducted by WHO and the Baring Foundation, include:

  • Assisting older people to overcome social isolation by providing opportunities for friendship and support.
  • Improving mental wellbeing, confidence and self-esteem
  • Helping people trough periods of loss and bereavement
  • Improvements in measures of physical health, such as functional ability, joint mobility and cardiovascular fitness, allowing older people to undertake increased levels of general daily activity.
  • Skill development in the creative arts
  • Enjoyment and pleasure

Engaging with the arts can empower people in a way that complements rehabilitation. Through Arts Engagement in Hospitals, research shown in the Sector Guide created by HammondCare highlights that the act of creating something tangible has a transformative effect on older people.

Whether through visual art, music, artistic movement, photography – all art forms provided people with tools to express emotion, experience or thoughts in a way that they may not have had access to before. The artists help to give people these tools, partnering with them to bring the positive changes that they want to see in their own lives.

“The Arts Engagement in Hospitals program and artists gave me power to try new things and the drive to keep going.”
Ahmed
Arts Engagement in Hospitals participant

Find out more about our Arts Engagement in Hospitals program

Find out more