Creative Arts Therapy as a Potential Intervention to Prevent Burnout and Build Resilience in Health Care Professionals

Author:

Reed Katherine1,Cochran Kathryn L.2,Edelblute Anthony3,Manzanares Daniel4,Sinn Hillary3,Henry Michael4,Moss Marc2

Affiliation:

1. Katherine Reed is Manager and Art Therapist for the Ponzio Creative Arts Therapy Program, Gary Pavilion, Children’s Hospital Colorado, 13123 E 16th Ave, Aurora, CO 80045 (katherine.reed@childrenscolorado.org).

2. Kathryn L. Cochran is the CORAL Program Manager, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and Marc Moss is the Roger S. Mitchell Professor of Medicine and Vice Chair of Clinical Research for the Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.

3. Anthony Edelblute is a Music Therapist and Hillary Sinn is a Dance/Movement Therapist for the Ponzio Creative Arts Therapy Program, Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado.

4. Daniel Manzanares is Community Programs Coordinator, and Michael Henry is Executive Director and Co-founder, Lighthouse Writers Workshop, Denver, Colorado.

Abstract

The delivery of health care is undergoing a rapid evolution that is dramatically changing the way health care professionals perform their job responsibilities. In this increasingly stressful work environment, professionals are experiencing alarming rates of burnout. Recent efforts to enhance wellness have been directed toward organizations. However, because of the nature of the work performed in intensive care units, interventions to develop individual resilience are also needed. Currently, medical centers are environments in which the emotional impact of work-related trauma is often minimized and rarely processed. Some individuals may struggle to describe or express the impact of those traumas. Through nonverbal interventions, creative arts therapy can help people access, explore, and share authentic emotion in visual, musical, physical, or written form. By reconstructing meaning through transformative methods, participants may confront, reflect, and better cope with traumatic experiences while catalyzing social support networks and deepening relational bonds in the workplace.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,Emergency Medicine,General Medicine

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