Perkins Rosie, Mason-Bertrand Adele, Tymoszuk Urszula, Spiro Neta, Gee Kate, Williamon Aaron
Centre for Performance Science, Royal College of Music, London, UK.
Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Jun 24;21(1):1208. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11233-6.
Loneliness is a public health challenge, associated with premature mortality and poorer health outcomes. Social connections can mitigate against loneliness, and there is evidence that the arts can support social connectedness. However, existing research on the arts and social connectedness is limited by focus on particular age groups and arts activities, as well as a reliance on typically small-scale studies.
This study reports survey data from 5892 adults in the United Kingdom, closely matched to the national profile in terms of sociodemographic and economic characteristics. It investigates the extent to which arts engagement is perceived to be linked with feelings of social connectedness, which forms of arts engagement are reported as most connecting, and how. Data were collected via the HEartS Survey, a newly designed tool to capture arts engagement in the United Kingdom and its associations with social and mental health outcomes. Demographic and quantitative data, pertaining to the extent to which arts engagement is perceived to be linked with social connectedness, were analysed descriptively. Qualitative data pertaining to respondents' perceptions of how arts engagement is linked with feelings of social connectedness were analysed using inductive thematic analysis.
Results demonstrated that the majority of respondents (82%) perceive their arts engagement to be linked with feelings of social connectedness at least some of the time. The forms of arts engagement most linked with feelings of social connectedness were attending a live music performance, watching a live theatre performance, and watching a film or drama at the cinema or other venue. Four overarching themes characterise how arts engagement is perceived to facilitate feelings of social connectedness: social opportunities, sharing, commonality and belonging, and collective understanding.
The findings suggest that arts engagement can support social connectedness among adults in the UK through multiple pathways, providing large-scale evidence of the important role that the arts can play in supporting social public health.
孤独是一项公共卫生挑战,与过早死亡和较差的健康结果相关。社会联系可以减轻孤独感,并且有证据表明艺术能够促进社会联系。然而,现有的关于艺术与社会联系的研究存在局限性,主要集中在特定年龄组和艺术活动上,并且依赖于通常规模较小的研究。
本研究报告了来自英国5892名成年人的调查数据,这些数据在社会人口统计学和经济特征方面与全国概况紧密匹配。该研究调查了艺术参与在多大程度上被认为与社会联系感有关,哪些艺术参与形式被报告为最具联系性,以及其方式。数据通过“心灵调查”(HEartS Survey)收集,这是一种新设计的工具,用于捕捉英国的艺术参与情况及其与社会和心理健康结果的关联。对与艺术参与在多大程度上被认为与社会联系有关的人口统计学和定量数据进行了描述性分析。使用归纳主题分析法对与受访者对艺术参与如何与社会联系感相关的看法有关的定性数据进行了分析。
结果表明,大多数受访者(82%)认为他们的艺术参与至少在某些时候与社会联系感有关。与社会联系感最相关的艺术参与形式是参加现场音乐表演、观看现场戏剧表演以及在电影院或其他场所观看电影或戏剧。艺术参与被认为促进社会联系感的方式主要有四个总体主题:社交机会、分享、共性与归属感以及集体理解。
研究结果表明,艺术参与可以通过多种途径支持英国成年人之间的社会联系,为艺术在支持社会公共卫生方面可以发挥的重要作用提供了大规模证据。