Florida Chamber of Commerce

Helping doctors prescribe art and culture for better health

The University of Florida Center for Arts in Medicine released a guide this week for health care practitioners, insurance companies, and community organizations on how to integrate arts, culture, and nature into prescription programs, a concept known as social prescribing.

“Arts on Prescription: A Field Guide for U.S. Communities,” developed in partnership with the Mass Cultural Council, offers a roadmap for “prescribing” creative activities like art classes, dance lessons, and visits to museums, gardens, and theaters to support and improve a patient’s health, well-being, and quality of life.

“As overburdened primary care providers struggle to meet patients’ needs, community activities like these show promise to boost well-being and prevent the onset of disease,” says Jill Sonke, co-author and director of research in the UF Center for Arts in Medicine and associate professor in UF’s College of the Arts. “In some cases, these prescriptions are covered by regional insurance agencies.”

The evidence-based field guide is the first how-to manual for communities eager to engage the arts and cultural resources in efforts to improve collective health.

“It presents a step-by-step approach for cultural and art organizations as well as health and social care providers on how to create or expand these programs,” says Tasha Golden, lead author and director of research at the International Hearts + Minds Lab at Johns Hopkins Medicine.

While most U.S. physicians and insurance companies aren’t yet referring patients to museum visits or dance classes, research into social prescribing in the United Kingdom and other countries where the practice is more prevalent is showing that such an approach to healing can improve health outcomes.

That led Sonke and colleagues at the EpiArts Lab, a National Endowment for the Arts Research Lab based at UF in partnership with University College London, to look for similar correlations in the U.S. Their findings so far are promising and contributed to the evidence-based content in the field guide.

The Arts on Prescription field guide, designed to build community partnerships, highlights a handful of arts on prescription programs in the United States and the diverse ways in which these programs can be carried out. For example:

“This field guide can help communities unlock the power and potential of the arts and cultural assets right in their own backyard,” said Susan Magsamen, executive director of the International Arts + Mind Lab and co-author of “Your Brain On Art: How the Arts Transform Us.” “Fueled by growing scientific evidence, health care practitioners are coming to understand the critical link between a community’s health and well-being and its artistic, creative, cultural, and aesthetic experiences.”

The Arts on Prescription: A Field Guide for U.S. Communities can be accessed free of charge on the UF Center for Arts in Medicine website.

###

About the University of Florida
The University of Florida attracts the best and brightest students, staff and faculty, places them together and connects them with world-class resources to spark extraordinary discoveries and innovations. UF’s momentum is reflected in the university’s designation as a No. 1 public university in the country by the Wall Street Journal. Artificial intelligence is a centerpiece at UF, spanning all disciplines so that every student has the opportunity to acquire competence and expertise in AI. The University of Florida is a place where limitless potential meets boundless opportunity through teaching, research, scholarship and service to the state, the nation and the world. 

Working on a story and still need help? You can reach us at 850-323-0353 or news@ufl.edu, and we will respond promptly. You can find an expert for your next story here.

 

Media Contact:
Karen Dooley
352-219-0567
dooleyk@ufl.edu

Exit mobile version