Facilitated arts engagement with women veterans for health and well-being

Author:

Lenette Caroline1ORCID,Johnston Tanja2,Paramanathan Jandy2,Poorun Sonia1

Affiliation:

1. University of New South Wales

2. Australian National Veterans Arts Museum

Abstract

To demonstrate the health and well-being benefits of facilitated arts engagement with women veterans, we draw on a key practice-based example from the Australian National Veterans Arts Museum (ANVAM), an organization with expertise in collaborative art-making with veterans. We outline ANVAM’s framework and the processes art therapists use to create facilitated art exhibitions. We discuss how veterans’ involvement with art-making has therapeutic benefits, can contribute new knowledge on health and well-being, and convey nuances of gender-specific experiences. We briefly outline the trend in evidence from academic literature on arts-health research with veterans and the sparse creative research with women veterans to highlight the potential of art-based methods in veteran health and well-being research, given growing numbers and the expanding roles of women in defence. Arts-health research using diverse methods has yielded promising results in this field. As such, interdisciplinary, co-designed, and strength-based art-based research with women veterans can add to knowledge co-creation on this topic.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

The UNSW Australian Human Rights Institute and by ANVAM

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

Music,Philosophy,Clinical Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Cultural Studies

Reference37 articles.

1. Music projects with veteran and military communities,2018

2. Perspectives and contexts of arts, social health and the military;Arts & Health,2015

3. Mental health of transgender veterans in US states with and without discrimination and hate crime legal protection;American Journal of Public Health,2016

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