Arts on Prescription programmes show statistically significant but clinically modest reductions in depression and anxiety among adults
This narrative synthesis examines community-based Arts on Prescription programmes where artistic activities are prescribed by health professionals. The review covers adults participating in these initiatives led by artists or musicians. The scope includes wellbeing as the primary outcome and depression and anxiety as secondary outcomes.
The analysis included 12 to 1,297 participants across community-based settings. Results indicate improvement in wellbeing was reported for the overall population. For depression and anxiety specifically, the authors note statistically significant but clinically modest reductions.
Important limitations include lack of control groups and small, non-representative samples. Follow-up periods were short, which restricts long-term conclusions. The authors state that evidence regarding depression and anxiety was limited to one study. Causality was not reported, and the certainty note highlights these constraints.
Practice relevance suggests potential benefits for depression and anxiety that warrant investigation in more rigorous study designs. Safety data such as adverse events or discontinuations were not reported. Clinicians should interpret these findings cautiously given the preliminary nature of the evidence.