Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study

The priorities many nursing homes give to physical care often supersede consideration for leisure arrangement and resources for residents. Such an approach often resulted in low level of activity. Inactive lifestyle in nursing homes can diminish the quality of life of residents and elicit negative e...

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Main Author: Tan, Michael Koon Boon
Other Authors: F. J. Saavedra Macías
Format: Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, Vicerrectorado de Investigación 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145096
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1450962023-03-11T19:45:41Z Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study Tan, Michael Koon Boon F. J. Saavedra Macías A. Español Nogueiro S. Arias Sánchez M. Calderón García Humanities Arts Vitality The priorities many nursing homes give to physical care often supersede consideration for leisure arrangement and resources for residents. Such an approach often resulted in low level of activity. Inactive lifestyle in nursing homes can diminish the quality of life of residents and elicit negative emotions such as boredom, reinforced dependency, lowered self-esteem, and diminished morale. In the light of population ageing and an increased in demand for nursing homes in Singapore, this research addressed the current lack of research on lifestyle arrangement to promote the personal well-being of nursing home residents. In doing so, it investigates the effect of a participatory visual arts programme to foster the well-being of nursing home residents. Through a novel approach that combined arts-health practice with social scientific qualitative case study, the link between participatory arts and vitality was explored. Participatory arts was found to vitalise the sensory, physical, cognitive, emotional, social dimension of residents and promote self-actualisation. Keywords: arts, vitality, eldercare, ageing. Accepted version 2020-12-10T07:44:57Z 2020-12-10T07:44:57Z 2017 Book Chapter Tan, M. K. B. (2017). Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study. In F. J. Saavedra Macías, A. Español Nogueiro, S. Arias Sánchez & M. Calderón García (Eds.), Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion (pp. 245–254). Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, Vicerrectorado de Investigación. 978-84-697-3582-4 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145096 245 254 en Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion © 2017 University of Seville - Vicerrectorado de Investigación- V Plan Propio de Investigación. All rights reserved. This book chapter is made available with permission of University of Seville - Vicerrectorado de Investigación- V Plan Propio de Investigación. application/pdf Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, Vicerrectorado de Investigación
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities
Arts
Vitality
spellingShingle Humanities
Arts
Vitality
Tan, Michael Koon Boon
Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
description The priorities many nursing homes give to physical care often supersede consideration for leisure arrangement and resources for residents. Such an approach often resulted in low level of activity. Inactive lifestyle in nursing homes can diminish the quality of life of residents and elicit negative emotions such as boredom, reinforced dependency, lowered self-esteem, and diminished morale. In the light of population ageing and an increased in demand for nursing homes in Singapore, this research addressed the current lack of research on lifestyle arrangement to promote the personal well-being of nursing home residents. In doing so, it investigates the effect of a participatory visual arts programme to foster the well-being of nursing home residents. Through a novel approach that combined arts-health practice with social scientific qualitative case study, the link between participatory arts and vitality was explored. Participatory arts was found to vitalise the sensory, physical, cognitive, emotional, social dimension of residents and promote self-actualisation. Keywords: arts, vitality, eldercare, ageing.
author2 F. J. Saavedra Macías
author_facet F. J. Saavedra Macías
Tan, Michael Koon Boon
format Book Chapter
author Tan, Michael Koon Boon
author_sort Tan, Michael Koon Boon
title Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
title_short Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
title_full Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
title_fullStr Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
title_full_unstemmed Feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a Singapore case study
title_sort feeling alive! : participatory visual arts programme and vitality in a nursing home – a singapore case study
publisher Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, Vicerrectorado de Investigación
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145096
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