Centre for Performance Science, Royal College of Music, London, United Kingdom.
Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 12;16(3):e0246078. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246078. eCollection 2021.
Evidence on the role of the arts in promoting health and wellbeing has grown over the last two decades. In the United Kingdom, studies using secondary data sources have documented temporal variations in levels of arts engagement in the population, its determinants and its mental wellbeing implications. However, arts engagement is often characterized by prioritizing "high-brow" art forms. In this article, we introduce the HEartS Survey, a tool that aims to increase the balance between inclusivity and brevity of existing arts engagement measures and to focus specifically on the connection between arts engagement and social wellbeing. We explore trends in participatory and receptive engagement with literary, visual, performing, crafts and decorative arts among 5,338 adults in the UK in 2018-2019 using summative engagement scores and cluster analysis. Regression models, adjusted for demographic, socioeconomic, health, and social covariates, examine correlations between arts engagement and psychological and social wellbeing measures. Over 97% of respondents reported engagement in one or more arts activities at least once during 2018-2019, with reading and listening to music being the most popular activities. Arts engagement grouped into three distinct clusters: 19.8% constituted "low engagers" whose main source of engagement was occasional reading; 44.4% constituted "receptive consumers" who read and listened to music frequently and engaged with popular receptive arts activities such as cinema, live music, theater, exhibitions, and museums; and 35.8% constituted "omnivores" who frequently engaged in almost all arts activities. In agreement with existing studies, more arts engagement was associated with higher levels of wellbeing, social connectedness, and lower odds of intense social loneliness. In contrast, we found a positive association between more arts engagement, depression, and intense emotional loneliness for the most highly engaged omnivores. We conclude that arts engagement in the population forms specific profiles with distinct characteristics and consider implications for mental and social wellbeing.
过去二十年中,有关艺术在促进健康和福祉方面作用的证据不断增加。在英国,利用二手数据源开展的研究记录了人口中艺术参与度的时间变化、其决定因素及其对心理健康的影响。然而,艺术参与度通常以优先考虑“高雅”艺术形式为特征。在本文中,我们介绍了 HEartS 调查,这是一种旨在增加包容性和现有艺术参与度衡量工具简洁性之间平衡的工具,并特别关注艺术参与度与社会福祉之间的联系。我们使用总结性参与得分和聚类分析,探讨了英国 2018-2019 年间 5338 名成年人在文学、视觉、表演、手工艺和装饰艺术方面的参与性和接受性参与趋势。回归模型调整了人口统计学、社会经济、健康和社会协变量,研究了艺术参与度与心理和社会福祉衡量标准之间的相关性。超过 97%的受访者报告在 2018-2019 年期间至少参加过一次一项或多项艺术活动,其中阅读和听音乐是最受欢迎的活动。艺术参与度分为三个不同的群体:19.8%的人构成“低参与度者”,他们的主要参与来源是偶尔阅读;44.4%的人构成“接受型消费者”,他们经常阅读和听音乐,并参与流行的接受型艺术活动,如电影、现场音乐、戏剧、展览和博物馆;35.8%的人构成“杂食者”,他们经常参与几乎所有的艺术活动。与现有研究一致,更多的艺术参与度与更高的幸福感、社会联系和更低的强烈社交孤独感相关。相比之下,我们发现对于参与度最高的杂食者来说,更多的艺术参与度与抑郁和强烈的情感孤独感之间存在正相关关系。我们得出结论,人群中的艺术参与度形成了具有不同特征的特定特征,并考虑了对心理健康和社会福祉的影响。