Research watch: art therapy: a dose of treatment, an aid to social inclusion or an unnecessary indulgence?

Author:
HOLTTUM Sue
Journal article citation:
Mental Health and Social Inclusion, 17(2), 2013, pp.64-69.
Publisher:
Emerald

Purpose – This Research Watch aims to summarise two recent and very different research publications on art therapy and comments on their ability to shed light on the usefulness of art therapy to address mental distress and enhance social inclusion. Design/methodology/approach – The author discusses a recent edition of a UK art therapy journal in which research papers focus on art therapy with people who have been given a diagnosis of personality disorder. The main methodologies are qualitative describing participants’ and/or therapists’ experiences and the role of art therapy in addressing serious mental distress. The second publication is a recent report of a large randomised controlled trial of art therapy for people given a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The author assesses the value of both publications in informing us about the usefulness of art therapy in addressing mental distress and enhancing social inclusion. Findings – In the author's view, neither publication establishes definitively how or whether art therapy might address serious mental distress, whether labelled personality disorder or schizophrenia. However, the qualitative articles provide insight into possible helpful (and less helpful) aspects of therapy. The randomised trial should have been able to establish general principles about the effectiveness of art therapy for a specific group of people in specified contexts, but instead exemplifies many problems inherent in the pervasive research culture of putting numbers onto complex human interactions and calculating their value for money, sometimes at the expense of really understanding what is going on. Originality/value – The author draws upon these two very different examples of research to reflect a current dilemma in UK art therapy research, and tentatively looks at possible ways forward. (Publisher abstract)

Subject terms:
art therapy, social inclusion, treatment, schizophrenia, personality disorders, mental health problems, therapies;
Content type:
research review
Link:
Journal home page
ISSN online:
2042-8308
ISSN print:
2042-8316

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