• Disabil Rehabil · Feb 2013

    The meaning and value of taking part in a person-centred arts programme to hospital-based stroke patients: findings from a qualitative study.

    • Matt Baumann, Simon Peck, Carrie Collins, and Guy Eades.
    • mattbaumann@tiscali.co.uk
    • Disabil Rehabil. 2013 Feb 1;35(3):244-56.

    PurposeThe importance of addressing mental well-being while stroke patients are in hospital has been recognized by policy makers but there is a gap between rhetoric and reality. This study explored the potential for using a person-centred, artist facilitated, one-to-one arts programme to improve the emotional and mental well-being of patients, which may be adversely affected as a result of the negative experiences arising from stroke and hospitalization.MethodThe study focused on those patients remaining in hospital for above average durations and included patients with functional, cognitive and speech or language impairments. After participation in the arts programme and before discharge, semi-structured interviews were undertaken with sixteen patients, and in the case of two patients with severe cognitive loss, a relative, as a proxy, was interviewed. Interviews explored the experience of stroke and hospital stay and the meaning and value of taking part in Time Being Stroke and the data was analysed thematically. To underpin and contextualize the interview material, clinical status and treatment information routinely collected by the multi-disciplinary stroke team was obtained and analysed; in addition material on the content of each session was recorded by artists and analysed.ResultsPatients' accounts suggest that participation in a person-centred arts programme contributed to their mental well-being. As might be expected from a person-centred intervention, benefits varied across the sample, but the most commonly mentioned positive aspects of participation included the experiences of: pleasure and enjoyment, a sense of connection with the artists, mental stimulation, learning and creativity, engagement in purposeful occupation and relief from boredom, and reconnection with valued aspects of the self. These experiences of participation contrast strongly with the acute and chronic distress associated with stroke, impairment, and spending long periods of time in hospital.ConclusionsArts interventions such as the one implemented and evaluated in this study provide a positive and valuable experience for longer staying stroke patients, contributing to their mental well-being during an otherwise distressing illness and hospital stay.

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