Department of Primary Care and Mental Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Department of English, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMC Complement Med Ther. 2024 Jun 15;24(1):235. doi: 10.1186/s12906-024-04539-6.
Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust's Life Rooms initiative is an established and successful model of integrating arts and culture within NHS provision. In the face of COVID-19, the Life Rooms was restructured to provide a full suite of online resources. Following the lifting of restrictions, in-person arts provision returned to the Life Rooms sites. Additional evidence in respect of the impact on mental health and wellbeing of the return to in-person arts and cultural activities provided by the Life Rooms, as well as the relative merits of online and in-person arts and cultural activities, is needed to inform future planning around in-person, online, and/or hybrid provision.
Interviews with practitioners delivering cultural and creative courses at the Life Rooms (n = 8) and users of the Life Rooms (n = 5) were conducted to explore the impact of the return to in-person arts provision at the Life Rooms, as well as the merits of online and in-person arts provision. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.
Three overarching themes were identified: 'Provision, access, and reach'; 'Value of arts and creativity'; and 'Challenges with the Life Rooms model in the new normal'. The findings demonstrate the critical role of arts and cultural provision in providing stigma-free environments to reconnect the vulnerable and isolated. As re-engagement remained slow, there is a need to be responsive to hesitation around re-engaging in-person. The Life Rooms online learning offer remained vital for those who are vulnerable or otherwise unable to access in-person activities.
As our findings show a demand for maintaining online provision that enables accessibility together with in-person provision that boosts community connectedness, ensuring continued online access alongside in-person delivery should be prioritised. As mental health demands could continue to grow in coming years as the pandemic evolves, in-person arts engagement could have an important role in meeting mental health needs.
默西塞德郡医疗保健国民保健服务基金会的生活室倡议是一个成熟且成功的模式,即在国民保健服务中整合艺术和文化。在 COVID-19 面前,生活室进行了重组,提供了全套在线资源。限制解除后,现场艺术服务回到了生活室现场。需要更多关于生活室现场艺术和文化活动对心理健康和幸福感的影响的证据,以及在线和现场艺术和文化活动的相对优势,以便为现场、在线和/或混合服务的未来规划提供信息。
对在生活室提供文化和创意课程的从业者(n=8)和生活室的使用者(n=5)进行了访谈,以探讨生活室现场艺术服务恢复后的影响,以及在线和现场艺术服务的优势。使用主题分析对数据进行了分析。
确定了三个总体主题:“供应、机会和范围”;“艺术和创造力的价值”;以及“新常态下生活室模式的挑战”。调查结果表明,艺术和文化服务在提供无污名环境以重新联系脆弱和孤立的人方面发挥了关键作用。由于重新参与的速度仍然缓慢,需要对重新参与现场活动的犹豫做出反应。对于那些脆弱或无法参加现场活动的人来说,生活室的在线学习提供仍然至关重要。
正如我们的研究结果所表明的,人们对在线提供的需求持续存在,以便实现可访问性,同时现场提供可以促进社区联系,因此应优先考虑继续在线提供,同时提供现场服务。随着疫情的发展,未来几年心理健康需求可能会继续增长,现场艺术参与可能在满足心理健康需求方面发挥重要作用。