The Value of Active Arts Engagement on Health and Well-Being of Older Adults: A Nation-Wide Participatory Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context of the Study
2.2. Design and Methodology
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
2.3.1. Method Ia and Ib Including Inductive Analysis to Build a Conceptual Framework
2.3.2. Method II–V Including Deductive Analysis Based on a Conceptual Framework
2.3.3. Collaborative Analysis
2.4. Participant Recruitment and Background Participant
3. Results
3.1. Complexity of Expressing Value
“The intimacy that occurs, you can’t put that into words or examples. It is in the scenes that occur, it is also in the sharing of …. At one moment, somebody was going through a divorce after 40 years of marriage, and they wanted to share that with the group. And then you just see, that people dare to be vulnerable, if you dare to share that. So there is just a deeper layer which connects after a while. You cannot explain that to anybody.” (woman, 70–80 years, theatre)
“It gives me a good feeling inside, singing. I can’t really say anything about it besides that. For me it is hard to express this.” (woman, 70–80 years, singing)
3.2. Positive Feelings
“...You are amongst people, you get to know each other a little bit and one person does it this way, the other that way and then we always have to laugh…. She (dance teacher) acts truly crazy, but really fun. Then she’ll laugh and say: Just pretend you have a snowball in your hand. Now throw it away quickly. And hit someone with it”, that is what she does. Then we all laugh. And we put some extra power into it, you enjoy it then, it is intense.” (woman, 80+ years, dance)
3.3. Personal and Artistic Growth
“I really have progressed with what I am doing. And also, I am becoming looser in what I do. Or it is getting easier, you know, it flows more. In the beginning, you are very much occupied with: what am I making now, and what does it look like?” (woman, 70–80 years, visual arts)
“So then I ended up there. In the beginning I was really nervous: oh, can I really do that? A little bit fearful. I am scared I’ll spoil it or something. My hands started shaking. But slowly, the more mistakes you make, the more you learn. I was scared. That it would go wrong. That it would not become beautiful. That it will fail. My hands were shaking, like woooohhh!” (woman, aged 80+ years, visual arts)
“The singing is a challenge for me especially, because since I have been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, I could not sing anymore. No sound came from my mouth anymore. So then, we have a couple of songs, last time we had to sing, but I could not produce sound. I was quite taken aback that I could not do that anymore. I thought ‘Has Parkinson taken that away too?’ So I set myself to learning how to sing again. I spoke to my speech and language therapist and in bed at night I would move my head forwards and back and I felt that there was air coming in and I could sing again, that made me so happy! And then I practiced every day… I have taught myself how to sing again actually. So that is fun, when that works out.” (woman, 60–70 years, video)
3.4. Meaningful Social Interactions
“In other groups, we don’t get closer together, you don’t feel like it is a group. While here, even though I don’t know everyone by name, you still feel like you have taken part in a group experience when you go home…The atmosphere is important, the people are more important than the assignments…That mainly has to do with the challenge, see each other. Look each other into the eyes, so you encounter each other’s soul as it were. I don’t often look other people straight in the eye, or they look away, here you do really look at each other’s eyes.” (woman, 70–80 years, dance)
“Singing together can be beautiful… there is a certain contact which you do not have in your daily life, this you find there. Feeling connected…” (woman, 70–80 years, singing)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Art-Form | Description of Art Projects (Urban/Rural) (Scale Small, Intermediate or Large) | Average Amount of Older Participants |
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Dance, movement |
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Music, singing |
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Theatre, improvisation, performance |
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Visual art |
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Video |
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Spoken word |
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Number | Method | Participants | Data Format | Aim of Method | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ia | Face-to-face semi-structured interviews | Artists (n = 20) | Transcripts | Building relations with leading artists and generating insights into the value of older adults from the perspective of artists | January–August, 2020 |
Ib | Interviews by telephone | Older adults (n = 8) | Transcripts | Gathering experiences of older people themselves, from those who were cognitively able to verbalize and reflect on their experience | |
II | Semi-structured interviews by telephone | Older adults (n = 71) | Transcripts | ||
III | Participatory observations of the arts activities | Older adults | Field notes | Including stories of participants of art projects who were verbally or cognitively less able to tell researchers about their experiences. Getting a sense of the effect and experience of participants during the art activity itself, those aspects which might be harder to put into words or recall afterward. | |
IV | Informal open interviews (3–15 min) during the participatory observations | Older participants, artists and (in)formal care professionals involved in these activities (n = 37) | Field notes | Gathering stories and experiences ‘in the moment’ of the arts activity | |
V | Online workshops with arts-based techniques | Artists (n = 16) | Photography | To capture more subtle elements of participant experience harder to put into words, or cognitively reflect upon | September 2020–April 2021 |
Phase | Analysis | Means | Period |
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Inductive analysis to build a conceptual framework | |||
A | Thematic analysis of transcripts of face-to-face semi-structured interviews artists (n = 20) (method Ia) | MAXQDA (version 2018) | January–April, 2020 |
B | Thematic analysis of transcripts of formal semi-structured interviews (n = 50) with older adults (method Ib) | MAXQDA (version 2018) | March–May, 2020 |
Deductive analysis based on a conceptual framework for SenseMaker (Supplemental IV in Supplementary Materials) | |||
C | Analysis of micro-narratives (n = 470 of data of a diversity of methods (method I–IV) | SenseMaker (version 2020) | May–November 2020 |
Collaborative data analysis | |||
D | Collaborative analysis of the findings per project or art-form (10 sessions with 2–4 artists per session) | Digital workshop | November–December 2020 |
E | Validation session with different stakeholders (n = 56) around arts & health in the Netherlands | Digital workshop | January 2021 |
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Share and Cite
Groot, B.; de Kock, L.; Liu, Y.; Dedding, C.; Schrijver, J.; Teunissen, T.; van Hartingsveldt, M.; Menderink, J.; Lengams, Y.; Lindenberg, J.; et al. The Value of Active Arts Engagement on Health and Well-Being of Older Adults: A Nation-Wide Participatory Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8222. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158222
Groot B, de Kock L, Liu Y, Dedding C, Schrijver J, Teunissen T, van Hartingsveldt M, Menderink J, Lengams Y, Lindenberg J, et al. The Value of Active Arts Engagement on Health and Well-Being of Older Adults: A Nation-Wide Participatory Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(15):8222. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158222
Chicago/Turabian StyleGroot, Barbara, Lieke de Kock, Yosheng Liu, Christine Dedding, Janine Schrijver, Truus Teunissen, Margo van Hartingsveldt, Jan Menderink, Yvonne Lengams, Jolanda Lindenberg, and et al. 2021. "The Value of Active Arts Engagement on Health and Well-Being of Older Adults: A Nation-Wide Participatory Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 15: 8222. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158222
APA StyleGroot, B., de Kock, L., Liu, Y., Dedding, C., Schrijver, J., Teunissen, T., van Hartingsveldt, M., Menderink, J., Lengams, Y., Lindenberg, J., & Abma, T. (2021). The Value of Active Arts Engagement on Health and Well-Being of Older Adults: A Nation-Wide Participatory Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(15), 8222. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18158222