ARTâS EMBRACE Healing Through Creativity by Sandra Yeyati
A
rt can be a powerful force for healing. Its potential manifests in a disabled manâs triumphant dance or cancer patientâs stirring self-portrait. Throughout America, artâs redemption takes center stage at hospitals, nursing homes, jails and homeless shelters. Even an entire city can be transformed when its citizens embrace public art to add beauty, create community and heal its broken places.
Art in Medical Settings According to Jill Sonke, director of the University of Florida (UF) Center for Arts in Medicine, approximately half of U.S. hospitals have art programs that provide positive distraction, enjoyment and connection. To humanize otherwise intimidating environments, visual artists and musicians are employed to install appealing exhibits and play relaxing music. Artists also work at the bedside with patients as part of inter-professional care teams. Serving as an artist-in-residence early in her career, Sonke remembers a young female patient with sickle cell disease whose bouts of extreme pain required hospitalization. Dance sessions eased her suffering and enabled doctors to reduce pain medications. âThe way the patient described it was not that the pain was going away, but that she didnât mind it as much because she was enjoying dancing,â she says. While facilitating Dance for Life classes for Parkinsonâs patients, Sonke encountered a man suffering limited mobility and an inability to form facial expressions. After two months of biweekly sessions, he could lift his arms over his head and, to his wifeâs delight, smile again. âItâs that multimodal capacity of the arts,â Sonke explains. âAll at the same time, he was engaging in music,
movement and imagery. He was moving with others and experiencing joy and laughter.â According to Sonke, ongoing research seeks to pinpoint the public health benefits of art. In Britain, they have learned that people over 50 visiting museums or concerts once a month are almost half as likely to develop depression in older age. Other studies suggest that music can unlock memories and improve cognition. UF researchers are currently investigating whether live music in emergency and trauma care settings can reduce the need for opioids. âWhen people engage in the arts, they often enter into a flow state, that experience of losing yourself in art where we lose track of time and what weâre doing is intrinsically motivated,â Sonke says. âA flow state can engage a relaxation response, helping to reduce stress and anxiety, which can enhance immune function.â
Art Therapy for Cancer Patients Board-certified art therapist Mallory Montgomery helps cancer patients in Detroitâs Henry Ford Hospital work through symptoms of depression, anxiety or trauma. âAny person seeking a talk therapist or social worker could also consult with an art therapist,â she says. âWe have the same training, but use art instead of just words. Evidence suggests that art therapy accesses healing faster because youâre forging a deep mind/body connection.â When counseling a double mastectomy patient that has questions about who they are now that theyâre missing a part of their identity, Montgomery might offer a printed body map so that they can pinpoint where they carry feelings of loss, pain or confusion. âBy drawing or coloring in those areas, Iâm asking them to show how theyâre being affected physically, emotionally and spiritually, and to externalize the overwhelming, negative side of their problem,â she explains. Using a second body map, Montgomery might invite the patient to draw or paint in those same areas to transform the pain into something more positive. âIs it going to blossom like a flower or be soothed with water? What imagery can you create that represents the opposite of your pain or an improvement of your concerns? We might also do a portrait to highlight other aspects of you and your personality that still exist, even September 2021
23