Art Therapy Improves Mood, and Reduces Pain and Anxiety when Offered at Bedside during Acute Hospital Treatment

Publication date: Available online 7 October 2017 Source:The Arts in Psychotherapy Author(s): Tamara A. Shella Art therapists can engage medical inpatients in the creation of art to encourage emotional and physical healing. Utilizing a chart review, the impact of art therapy sessions at the bedside, with patients (N=195) in a large, urban, teaching hospital was reviewed. The sample was predominantly female (n=166) as more women than men agreed to participate in an art therapy session. Patients were seen by registered art therapists, and as a part of regular clinical practice, asked to rate their perception of mood, anxiety, and pain using a 5-point faces scale before and after an art therapy session. Multiple diagnoses were included in this chart review, making this study more representative of the variety of medical issues leading to hospitalization. Analysis of pre and post results demonstrated significant improvements in pain, mood, and anxiety levels of art therapy sessions within all patients regardless of gender, age, or diagnosis (all p<0.001).
Source: Arts in Psychotherapy - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research