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Art for health’s sake or health for art’s sake?: Disentangling the bidirectional relationships between arts engagement and mental health

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Art for health’s sake or health for art’s sake? Disentangling the bidirectional relationships between arts engagement and mental health. / Mak , Hei Wan; Hu, Yang; Bu, Feifei et al.
In: PNAS Nexus, Vol. 3, pgae465, 30.11.2024, p. 1–10.

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Mak HW, Hu Y, Bu F, Bone JK, Fancourt D. Art for health’s sake or health for art’s sake? Disentangling the bidirectional relationships between arts engagement and mental health. PNAS Nexus. 2024 Nov 30;3:1–10. pgae465. Epub 2024 Nov 4. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae465

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@article{dcdf2fecf62b4a4ab8da5c7c5fa76d3c,
title = "Art for health{\textquoteright}s sake or health for art{\textquoteright}s sake?: Disentangling the bidirectional relationships between arts engagement and mental health",
abstract = "Increasing evidence links arts engagement with mental health, but the directionality of the link remains unclear. Applying a novel approach to causal inference, we used non-recursive instrumental variable models to analyse two waves of data from the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study (N = 17,927). Our findings reveal bidirectional causal relationships between arts engagement (arts participation, cultural attendance, heritage visits) and mental health (GHQ-12 mental distress, SF-12 MCS mental well-being). After adjusting for Time 1 measures and identified confounders, cultural attendance and heritage visits were reciprocally associated with mental distress and mental well-being, while arts participation was only reciprocally associated with mental well-being. The bidirectional effects between arts engagement and mental health are modest but clearly demonstrated not just from mental health to arts but also from arts to mental health. Our findings indicate that previous evidence of an association between arts engagement and mental health is due to bidirectional causal effects. Interventions that boost arts participation, cultural attendance and heritage visits may help break the negative feedback loop and enhance mental health. ",
author = "Mak, {Hei Wan} and Yang Hu and Feifei Bu and Bone, {Jessica K.} and Daisy Fancourt",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae465",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "1–10",
journal = "PNAS Nexus",
issn = "2752-6542",
publisher = "Oxford University Press (OUP)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Art for health’s sake or health for art’s sake?

T2 - Disentangling the bidirectional relationships between arts engagement and mental health

AU - Mak , Hei Wan

AU - Hu, Yang

AU - Bu, Feifei

AU - Bone, Jessica K.

AU - Fancourt, Daisy

PY - 2024/11/30

Y1 - 2024/11/30

N2 - Increasing evidence links arts engagement with mental health, but the directionality of the link remains unclear. Applying a novel approach to causal inference, we used non-recursive instrumental variable models to analyse two waves of data from the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study (N = 17,927). Our findings reveal bidirectional causal relationships between arts engagement (arts participation, cultural attendance, heritage visits) and mental health (GHQ-12 mental distress, SF-12 MCS mental well-being). After adjusting for Time 1 measures and identified confounders, cultural attendance and heritage visits were reciprocally associated with mental distress and mental well-being, while arts participation was only reciprocally associated with mental well-being. The bidirectional effects between arts engagement and mental health are modest but clearly demonstrated not just from mental health to arts but also from arts to mental health. Our findings indicate that previous evidence of an association between arts engagement and mental health is due to bidirectional causal effects. Interventions that boost arts participation, cultural attendance and heritage visits may help break the negative feedback loop and enhance mental health.

AB - Increasing evidence links arts engagement with mental health, but the directionality of the link remains unclear. Applying a novel approach to causal inference, we used non-recursive instrumental variable models to analyse two waves of data from the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study (N = 17,927). Our findings reveal bidirectional causal relationships between arts engagement (arts participation, cultural attendance, heritage visits) and mental health (GHQ-12 mental distress, SF-12 MCS mental well-being). After adjusting for Time 1 measures and identified confounders, cultural attendance and heritage visits were reciprocally associated with mental distress and mental well-being, while arts participation was only reciprocally associated with mental well-being. The bidirectional effects between arts engagement and mental health are modest but clearly demonstrated not just from mental health to arts but also from arts to mental health. Our findings indicate that previous evidence of an association between arts engagement and mental health is due to bidirectional causal effects. Interventions that boost arts participation, cultural attendance and heritage visits may help break the negative feedback loop and enhance mental health.

U2 - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae465

DO - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae465

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 1

EP - 10

JO - PNAS Nexus

JF - PNAS Nexus

SN - 2752-6542

M1 - pgae465

ER -