By Barb McDowell | Executive Director
Art heals...and this young artist knows that well. While recently in the hospital, Model Magic clay was the choice for the day for making a colorful, creative gnome!
Each year, thousands of children like her enjoy the healing power of art with Children's Healing Art Project (CHAP). In 2022 alone, CHAP shared 8,745 healing art experiences for children and families facing medical and/or mental health challenges. Each interaction is unique because the child is always the decision-maker. One day they might want to paint. Another day they may be in the mood to draw or make jewelry. It's entirely up to them as to what they need in the moment. CHAP fills our colorful art carts full of every art supply you can imagine and rolls these carts down hospital halls and into playrooms and waiting rooms every week. If a child is in isolation or is not feeling well enough to join in, CHAP visits their room to see what supplies they would like, makes a personalized tray of what they have requested, and delivers it to their hospital bedside.
Medical environments can be places of significant anxiety, fear, and restlessness. CHAP’s art projects translate nervous energy into creativity, provide a sense of calm, and promote family connection and support in the midst of otherwise difficult times. Art changes the whole atmosphere of any room, providing parents and children with soothing activities that allow them to focus on beauty and creativity instead of anxiety. It can calm their nerves, pass the time, and occupy bored children -- making a better environment for everyone.
Research Findings: Children with critical and/or chronic illnesses and those with life-altering disabilities frequently experience pain, fear, depression, anxiety, and isolation. Critically ill children suffer from feelings of lack of control over their lives and the physical changes that often accompany critical illness, injury, or disability can be devastating. These children often lack the opportunity or ability to express their feelings and there are few opportunities for critically ill and disabled children to reflect on their journeys or be creative. The severe or chronic illness, injury, or disability of a child also takes an enormous toll on the entire family. Parents find themselves exhausted, siblings may feel neglected, and the entire family’s communication shifts to revolve around the needs of the sick child.
Art heals. A growing body of research demonstrates that incorporating arts experiences into healthcare and treatment plans can play an instrumental role in the healing process and improve overall quality of life and quality of care for children and their families. Research shows art promotes physical, mental and emotional recovery, decreases pain and helps children cope with anxiety. It can also reduce the use of pain medication. One study on the visual arts for children fighting cancer suggests that this art form is an effective way for children to cope with pain and help them regain a sense of control-- which is a key factor in reducing stress associated with cancer treatment.
This research is so important because it supports what CHAP teaching artists see when they are facilitating art for children and their families. It's the healing power of art.
Links:
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser