| Literature DB >> 34338902 |
Axel Fudickar1, Dag Konetzka2, Stine Maria Louring Nielsen3, Kathy Hathorn4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence-based art is the investigation of art effects and art investigated for effects. In this study the evidence regarding patient preferences for art styles and effects of art in nonpsychiatric hospitals and outpatient departments was reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Abstract art; Art effects; Biophilia; Figurative art; Isolation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34338902 PMCID: PMC8326640 DOI: 10.1007/s10354-021-00861-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wien Med Wochenschr ISSN: 0043-5341
Evidence based art studies in hospitals
| Endpoint | Reference | Method | Result | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Art Preference | Carpman 1993 [ | Interview | 300 | Natural views are preferred against other motives |
| Hanson 2013 [ | Questionnaire | 80 | Preference for natural views | |
| Frandsen 2014 [ | Interview | 100 | Patients prefer natural views | |
| Nielsen 2017 [ | Interview | 103 | Patients prefer figurative art | |
| Nanda 2008 [ | Interview | 67 | Patients prefer natural views over abstract art even if potential bias for quality is considered | |
| Nanda 2012 [ | 144 | Patients prefer natural views over abstract art even if natural views are compared with best-selling popular abstract art | ||
| Nanda 2009 [ | Rating scale | 64 | Children of all age groups preferred bright and colorful nature views with strong context | |
| Staricoff 2001 [ | Interview | 91 | Preference of art is independent of art style (Landscape vs. abstract) | |
| Tovborg 2019 [ | Interview | 600 | Art preference of patients and personnel is variable and situation-dependent | |
| Effects on well-being and behavior | Diette 2003 [ | Intervention | 108 | Pain reduction by natural views during bronchoscopy |
| Miller 1992 [ | Intervention | 17 | Reduction of pain and fear by natural views in burn patients | |
| Schneider 2003 [ | Intervention | 16 | Virtual art and nature scenarios reduce fear during chemotherapy | |
| Tse 2002 [ | Intervention | 46 | Nature views increase pain threshold and pain tolerance in probands | |
| Frandsen 2014 [ | Interview | 100 | Positive effect of art on mood and well-being | |
| Suter 2007 [ | Interview | 37 | Improvement of mood by own choice of pictures | |
| Staricoff 2001 [ | Interview | 91 | Positive effect of art on mood and stress independent of art style (landscape vs. abstract) | |
| Bonett 2015 [ | Interview | 46 | Natural views at the ceiling estimated as positive by patients during radiation therapy | |
| Nanda 2012 [ | Observation Noise level measurement | n.a. | Positive effect of natural views on behavior of waiting patients and noise level in an emergency department | |
| Nielsen 2017 [ | Interview Thermal camera | 68 | Art increases well-being independently of art styles Art in day rooms increases patient interaction | |
| Moss 2013 [ | Interview | 20 | Art promotes feeling of care, socialization and finding of new interests | |
| Nielsen 2017 [ | Multidimensional anthropological evaluation EEG, Eye-Tracking | 30 | Abstract and figurative art can have a positive effect on patients Reception of abstract art induces less cognitive strain than reception of figurative art | |
| Karnic 2014 [ | Questionnaire | 1094 | Positive effect of a clinical modern art program on mood, stress, comfort, and expectations | |
| Nanda 2002 [ | Questionnaire | 210 | Hospital art makes patients and visitors feel better | |
| McCabe 2013 [ | Interview/Scale | 199 | Effect of visual art on levels of anxiety and depression | |
| Effects on findings | Heerwagen 1990 [ | Measurement of heart frequency | 40 | Pictures in the waiting area reduce heart frequency and restlessness |
Coss 1996 [ [ | Measurement of blood pressure | 72 | Nature views reduce preoperative blood pressure | |
| Harper 2015 [ | Measurement of blood pressure | 117 | Natural views in examination rooms reduce blood pressure | |
| Ulrich 1993 [ | Measurement of analgetic consumption | 166 | Natural views reduce analgetic consumption | |
| Ulrich 2003 [ | Measurement of pulse-rate and blood pressure | 591 | Pulse-rate was lower in a nature environment design versus an urban environment design |
Summary of included evidence based art studies in hospitals
N case number, n.a. not applicable
Fig. 1Landscape photo with picture elements estimated as positive by patients: Open familiar landscape with calm water and shade-giving trees as relaxing diversion from clinical routine (Susanne Kollmann: “Landscape”, Muthesius University of Fine Arts and Design, Kiel). Abdruck mit freundlicher Genehmigung. Diese Abbildung fällt nicht unter die Creative Commons CC BY-Lizenz dieser Publikation
Fig. 2Abstract art intended for use in hospitals with mood-boosting colors. Abstract forms inspired by fingerprints associate changing individuality and helping hands and motivate reflexion (Anja Germanova: “Fingerprints Raumansicht”, Muthesius University of Fine Arts and Design, Kiel). Abdruck mit freundlicher Genehmigung. Diese Abbildung fällt nicht unter die Creative Commons CC BY-Lizenz dieser Publikation