Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study

The rapid ageing of populations entails high costs for societies and calls for effective public health interventions to mitigate its impacts. The Singapore A-Health Study constitutes part of an international randomised controlled trial to standardise a robust framework of art intervention for health...

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Main Author: Ho, Reen Wan Li
Other Authors: Ho Hau Yan Andy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156859
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1568592023-03-05T15:47:38Z Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study Ho, Reen Wan Li Ho Hau Yan Andy School of Social Sciences andyhyho@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology The rapid ageing of populations entails high costs for societies and calls for effective public health interventions to mitigate its impacts. The Singapore A-Health Study constitutes part of an international randomised controlled trial to standardise a robust framework of art intervention for health enhancement in older adults. Using a mixed methods analysis on a subsample, this paper examines the effect of the participatory arts intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers. Participants aged 60 and above were openly recruited (N = 62) and randomly assigned into the intervention (N = 31) or control (N = 31) group. The intervention group attended 12 weekly workshops at the National Gallery Singapore, comprising museum tours and art-making, while the control group attended none. Frailty, wellbeing and quality of life were assessed for all participants at four regular intervals, including at baseline before the randomised allocation. The intervention group additionally participated in a focus group discussion at the end of the intervention. Intervention group participants were hypothesised to experience unique improvements in frailty, wellbeing and quality of life over the 12 weeks. Linear mixed-effect models did not find quantitative evidence for intervention effects, though a thematic analysis uncovered four themes pointing to benefits of the intervention: promoting cognitive stimulation, enhancing perceived self-efficacy, enabling social involvement and fostering art appreciation. These themes were discussed on their holistic health benefits and health-transforming potential for participants. Overall, findings point to the potential of participatory arts interventions in shaping healthy ageing programmes in Singapore. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Economics and Psychology 2022-04-27T00:40:20Z 2022-04-27T00:40:20Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Ho, R. W. L. (2022). Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156859 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156859 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Ho, Reen Wan Li
Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
description The rapid ageing of populations entails high costs for societies and calls for effective public health interventions to mitigate its impacts. The Singapore A-Health Study constitutes part of an international randomised controlled trial to standardise a robust framework of art intervention for health enhancement in older adults. Using a mixed methods analysis on a subsample, this paper examines the effect of the participatory arts intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers. Participants aged 60 and above were openly recruited (N = 62) and randomly assigned into the intervention (N = 31) or control (N = 31) group. The intervention group attended 12 weekly workshops at the National Gallery Singapore, comprising museum tours and art-making, while the control group attended none. Frailty, wellbeing and quality of life were assessed for all participants at four regular intervals, including at baseline before the randomised allocation. The intervention group additionally participated in a focus group discussion at the end of the intervention. Intervention group participants were hypothesised to experience unique improvements in frailty, wellbeing and quality of life over the 12 weeks. Linear mixed-effect models did not find quantitative evidence for intervention effects, though a thematic analysis uncovered four themes pointing to benefits of the intervention: promoting cognitive stimulation, enhancing perceived self-efficacy, enabling social involvement and fostering art appreciation. These themes were discussed on their holistic health benefits and health-transforming potential for participants. Overall, findings point to the potential of participatory arts interventions in shaping healthy ageing programmes in Singapore.
author2 Ho Hau Yan Andy
author_facet Ho Hau Yan Andy
Ho, Reen Wan Li
format Final Year Project
author Ho, Reen Wan Li
author_sort Ho, Reen Wan Li
title Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
title_short Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
title_full Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
title_fullStr Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of Singapore older community dwellers: the Singapore a-health study
title_sort effects of a participatory-art based intervention on holistic health outcomes of singapore older community dwellers: the singapore a-health study
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156859
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