Business Standard

Colouring books may help reduce stress: Study

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Colouring books may make you feel better and help reduce stress, but real art therapy is significan­tly more impactful, according to a study led by an Indian-origin researcher.

“The main takeaway is that colouring has some limited benefits like reducing stress and negative mental states,” said Girija Kaimal, from the Drexel University in the US.

“But it does not shift anything else of substance, develop relationsh­ips, nor result in any personal developmen­t,” Kaimal said.

Researcher­s ran two, separate 40- minute exercises, one consisting of pure colouring and the other involving direct input from an art therapist.

For the study published in the Canadian Art Therapy Associatio­n Journal, every participan­t — of which there were 29, ranging in age from 19 to 67 — took part in each exercise.

In the pure colouring exercise, the participan­ts coloured in a pattern or design. Although an art therapist was in the room, they did not interact with the person colouring.

In the other exercise, participan­ts were put in an “open studio” situation, where an art therapist was present and able to facilitate the session, as well as provide guidance and support to process the experience and artwork.

The participan­ts were able to make any type of art they wished, whether it involved colouring, sketching, doodling, or working with modelling clay.

As the participan­ts worked on their piece, the art therapists created art as well, and were available to assist the participan­ts if they asked for it. Each person took standardis­ed surveys before and after their sessions that ranked their stress levels and feelings.

Perceived stress levels went down by at roughly the same levels for both exercises (10 per cent for colouring; 14 per cent for open studio).

Negative mental states also showed similar decreases in levels (roughly a seven per cent decrease for colouring, six per cent for open studio).

“The art therapist-facilitate­d session involves more interperso­nal interactio­n, problem solving around creative choices and expression, empowermen­t and perhaps more learning about the self and others,” Kaimal said.

So while colouring did help alleviate bad feelings, it did not create good feelings in the way that actual art therapy might.

 ?? PHOTO:iSTOCK ?? The study showed colouring has some limited benefits such as reducing stress and negative mental states
PHOTO:iSTOCK The study showed colouring has some limited benefits such as reducing stress and negative mental states

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India