Recent data reveals a striking disparity in arts participation between healthcare professionals and other demographics. While 71-82% of young adults, working-age individuals, and older adults report improved wellbeing following six-month arts engagement programs, healthcare workers show only 45% participation rates—a significant gap that warrants attention.
This lower engagement among medical professionals is particularly noteworthy given emerging evidence linking arts participation to enhanced empathy and improved patient care outcomes. Multiple studies have documented that regular arts engagement correlates with reduced depression, anxiety, and cognitive decline, benefits that could directly support clinician wellbeing and professional resilience.
As social prescribing programs expand across healthcare systems, researchers and administrators are increasingly examining barriers to arts participation among healthcare workers themselves. Understanding and addressing these obstacles could represent an important investment in both clinician wellbeing and the quality of care delivered to patients.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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