Zhao Rebecca, Rice Kathleen
Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Arts Health. 2024 May 16:1-19. doi: 10.1080/17533015.2024.2355134.
The intentions of this scoping review are to determine current uses of visual arts-based interventions for mental health and trauma support of marginalized populations, and to identify current gaps in knowledge in this emergent field.
Six databases (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Web of Science, PsycINFO, JSTOR) were searched for relevant studies. Following the PRISMA guidelines, 38 articles met the inclusion criteria.
Most interventions focused on improving the mental health of participants, or to provide opportunities for participants to process their experiences of mental health. Participants reported increased well-being, experiences of relaxation and/or distraction, and processing of mental health experiences. They perceived arts-based interventions as helpful and developed mutual social support with other participants.
Arts-based interventions have the potential to inform the development of culturally safe and relevant mental health care for marginalized populations beyond current mainstream mental health practices.
本范围综述的目的是确定基于视觉艺术的干预措施在为边缘化人群提供心理健康和创伤支持方面的当前用途,并找出这一新兴领域当前的知识空白。
在六个数据库(MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、Web of Science、PsycINFO、JSTOR)中检索相关研究。按照PRISMA指南,38篇文章符合纳入标准。
大多数干预措施侧重于改善参与者的心理健康,或为参与者提供处理其心理健康经历的机会。参与者报告称幸福感增强、有放松和/或分散注意力的体验,以及对心理健康经历的处理。他们认为基于艺术的干预措施很有帮助,并与其他参与者建立了相互的社会支持。
基于艺术的干预措施有可能为超越当前主流心理健康实践的、针对边缘化人群的文化安全且相关的心理健康护理的发展提供信息。