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    Arts on prescription: A qualitative outcomes study

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    Author
    Stickley, Theodore
    Eades, M.
    Keyword
    Health promotion
    Mental health
    Date
    2013
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1016/j.puhe.2013.05.001
    Publisher's URL
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033350613001674
    Abstract
    OBJECTIVES: In recent years, participatory community-based arts activities have become a recognized and regarded method for promoting mental health. In the UK, Arts on Prescription services have emerged as a prominent form of such social prescribing. This follow-up study reports on the findings from interviews conducted with participants in an Arts on Prescription programme two years after previous interviews to assess levels of 'distance travelled'.
    STUDY DESIGN: This follow-up study used a qualitative interview method amongst participants of an Arts on Prescription programme of work.
    METHODS: Ten qualitative one-to-one interviews were conducted in community-based arts venues. Each participant was currently using or had used mental health services, and had been interviewed two years earlier. Interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed and analysed.
    RESULTS: For each of the 10 participants, a lengthy attendance of Arts on Prescription had acted as a catalyst for positive change. Participants reported increased self-confidence, improved social and communication skills, and increased motivation and aspiration. An analysis of each of the claims made by participants enabled them to be grouped according to emerging themes: education: practical and aspirational achievements; broadened horizons: accessing new worlds; assuming and sustaining new identities; and social and relational perceptions. Both hard and soft outcomes were identifiable, but most were soft outcomes.
    CONCLUSIONS: Follow-up data indicating progress varied between respondents. Whilst hard outcomes could be identified in individual cases, the unifying factors across the sample were found predominately in the realm of soft outcomes. These soft outcomes, such as raised confidence and self-esteem, facilitated the hard outcomes such as educational achievement and voluntary work.Copyright © 2013 The Royal Society for Public Health. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Citation
    Stickley, T. & Eades, M. (2013). Arts on prescription: A qualitative outcomes study. Public Health, 127 (8), pp.727-734.
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/9084
    Collections
    Mental Health and Behavioural Conditions: General and Other

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