Troubleshooting Social Prescribing and the Arts in East London: Qualitative Findings From Community Arts Organisations and Link Workers

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Maria Grazia Turri, Vivian Vigliotti, Yumeng Wang, Joseph Cook, William Chamberlain, Francesca Cornaglia
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Abstract

Engagement in the arts has been shown to benefit health by supporting both prevention and treatment, leading to the concept of creative health. The social prescribing agenda has spurred the development of dedicated arts on prescription programmes; however, the creative health agenda is mostly delivered by community arts organisations which lack a specific brief for health and whose contribution to social prescribing is under-researched. Supported by Creative Wick, an independent nonprofit, community interest company based in East London, we investigated the practice, viability, and challenges of social prescribing of the arts within the two London boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Hackney. Qualitative, in-depth semistructured interviews were conducted with 13 community artists and four primary care link workers, and the findings were thematically analysed. We found that both artists and link workers lacked reciprocal knowledge, with link workers mostly unaware of the rich local offer, and artists either unaware of the social prescribing model or only indirectly informed through the influx of referred participants. We also found that a lack of standards in quality assurance for community arts organisations was perceived as a barrier to consistent referral by link workers. Moreover, the shortage and instability of funding for community arts organisations makes the model extremely precarious. On the positive side, both artists and link workers supported the idea of integrating community arts engagement into healthcare. Drawing from our findings, we propose that supporting community arts organisations to deliver creative health requires at least three key elements: stable funding, possibly through statutory provision within healthcare; a system of quality assurance and evaluation which accounts for a context-specific, nonmedicalised approach; and the implementation of virtuous referral pathways grounded in reciprocal knowledge. As the creative health agenda is considered vital for public health, integrating the contribution of community arts organisations becomes essential.

Abstract Image

排除社会处方和艺术在东伦敦:定性发现从社区艺术组织和链接工人
参与艺术已被证明有利于健康,因为它支持预防和治疗,从而产生了创造性健康的概念。社会处方议程刺激了专门的处方方案艺术的发展;然而,创造性的健康议程主要是由社区艺术组织提供的,这些组织缺乏对健康的具体介绍,对社会处方的贡献也没有得到充分的研究。在Creative Wick(一个位于东伦敦的独立非营利社区利益公司)的支持下,我们调查了伦敦陶尔哈姆莱茨和哈克尼两个行政区对艺术的社会规定的实践、可行性和挑战。我们对13名社区艺术家和4名初级保健工作人员进行了定性、深入的半结构化访谈,并对调查结果进行了主题分析。我们发现,艺术家和链接工人都缺乏相互的知识,链接工人大多不知道丰富的当地报价,艺术家要么不知道社会处方模型,要么只是通过推荐参与者的涌入间接了解。我们还发现,社区艺术机构缺乏质量保证标准,这被认为是衔接工作者持续转诊的障碍。此外,社区艺术机构的资金短缺和不稳定,使得这种模式极不稳定。积极的一面是,艺术家和工作人员都支持将社区艺术融入医疗保健的想法。根据我们的研究结果,我们建议支持社区艺术机构提供创意健康,至少需要三个关键要素:稳定的资金,可能通过医疗保健内的法定规定;一个质量保证和评估系统,说明具体情况,非医疗方法;以及建立在互惠知识基础上的良性转诊途径的实施。由于创造性卫生议程被认为对公共卫生至关重要,因此整合社区艺术组织的贡献变得至关重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
423
期刊介绍: Health and Social Care in the community is an essential journal for anyone involved in nursing, social work, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, general practice, health psychology, health economy, primary health care and the promotion of health. It is an international peer-reviewed journal supporting interdisciplinary collaboration on policy and practice within health and social care in the community. The journal publishes: - Original research papers in all areas of health and social care - Topical health and social care review articles - Policy and practice evaluations - Book reviews - Special issues
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