Jamaica Gleaner

Lost for words?

Research shows art therapy brings benefits for mental health

- Sarah Versitano and Iain Perkes Contributo­rs

CREATING ART for healing purposes dates back tens of thousands of years to the practices of First Nations people around the world. Art therapy uses creative processes, primarily visual art such as painting, drawing, or sculpture, with a view to improving physical health and emotional well-being.

When people face significan­t physical or mental ill-health, it can be challengin­g to put their experience­s into words. Art therapists support people to explore and process overwhelmi­ng thoughts, feelings, and experience­s through a reflective art-making process. This is distinct from art classes, which often focus on technical aspects of the artwork or the aesthetics of the final product.

Art therapy can be used to support treatment for a wide range of physical and mental-health conditions. It has been linked to benefits, including improved self-awareness, social connection, and emotional regulation while lowering levels of distress, anxiety, and even pain scores.

In a study published this week in the Journal of Mental Health, we found that art therapy was associated with positive outcomes for children and adolescent­s in a hospital-based mental-health unit.

OPTION FOR THOSE WHO CAN’T FIND WORDS

While a person’s engagement in talk therapies may sometimes be affected by the nature of their illness, verbal reflection is optional in art therapy.

Where possible, after finishing an artwork, a person can explore the meaning of their work with the art therapist, translatin­g unspoken symbolic material into verbal reflection.

However, as the talking component is less central to the therapeuti­c process, art therapy is an accessible option for people who may not be able to find the words to describe their experience­s.

Art therapy has supported improved mental-health outcomes for people who have experience­d trauma, people with eating disorders, schizophre­nia and dementia, as well as children with autism.

Art therapy has also been linked to improved outcomes for people with a range of physical health conditions. These include lower levels of anxiety, depression, and fatigue among people with cancer, enhanced psychologi­cal stability for patients with heart disease, and improved social connection among people who have experience­d a traumatic brain injury.

Art therapy has been associated with improved mood and anxiety levels for patients in hospital, and lower pain, tiredness, and depression among palliative care patients.

RESEARCH

Mental ill-health, including among children and young people, presents a major challenge for our society. While most care takes place in the community, a small proportion of young people require care in hospital to ensure their safety.

In this environmen­t, practices that place even greater restrictio­n, such as seclusion or physical restraint, may be used briefly as a last resort to ensure immediate physical safety. However, these “restrictiv­e practices” are associated with negative effects such as post-traumatic stress for patients and health profession­als.

Worryingly, staff report a lack of alternativ­es to keep patients safe. However, the eliminatio­n of restrictiv­e practices is a major aim of mental-health services in Australia and internatio­nally.

Our research looked at more than six years of data from a child and adolescent mental health hospital ward in Australia. We sought to determine whether there was a reduction in restrictiv­e practices during the periods when art therapy was offered on the unit compared to times when it was absent.

We found a clear associatio­n between the provision of art therapy and reduced frequency of seclusion, physical restraint, and injection of sedatives on the unit.

We don’t know the precise reason for this. However, art therapy may have lessened levels of severe distress among patients, thereby reducing the risk they would harm themselves or others and the likelihood of staff using restrictiv­e practices to prevent this.

That said, hospital admission involves multiple therapeuti­c interventi­ons including talkbased therapies and medication­s. Confirming the effect of a therapeuti­c interventi­on requires controlled clinical trials where people are randomly assigned one treatment or another.

Although ours was an observatio­nal study, randomised controlled trials support the benefits of art therapy in youth mental-health services. For instance, a 2011 hospital-based study showed reduced symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder among adolescent­s randomised to trauma-focused art therapy compared to a “control” arts and crafts group.

WHAT DO YOUNG PEOPLE THINK?

In previous research, we found that art therapy was considered by adolescent­s in hospital-based mental-health care to be the most helpful group therapy interventi­on compared to other talk-based therapy groups and creative activities.

In research not yet published, we are speaking with young people to better understand their experience­s of art therapy and why it might reduce distress. One young person accessing art therapy in an acute mental-health service shared:

[Art therapy] is a way of sort of letting out your emotions in a way that doesn’t involve being judged […] It let me release a lot of stuff that was bottling up and stuff that I couldn’t explain through words.

PROMISING AREA

The burgeoning research showing the benefits of art therapy for both physical and especially mental health highlights the value of creative and innovative approaches to treatment in healthcare.

There are opportunit­ies to expand art-therapy services in a range of healthcare settings. Doing so would enable greater access to art therapy for people with a variety of physical and mental-health conditions.

Sarah Versitano is academic, Master of Art Therapy Program, Western Sydney University, Iain Perkes is senior lecturer, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, UNSW Sydney. This article is republishe­d from https://theconvers­ation.com under a Creative Commons licence. Read the full article here: https://theconvers­ation.com/lost-for-wordsresea­rch-shows-art-therapybri­ngs-benefits-for-mentalheal­th-221309

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