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The Singapore Art-Health Study

N

Nanyang Technological University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Art
Quality of Life
Wellness, Psychological
Frailty

Treatments

Behavioral: Singapore A-Health Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05945589
IRB-2020-02-005

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of the Singapore Art-Health RCT is to examine the effect of a standardized 12-week museum -based participatory art program on health condition, well-being, and quality of life in older community dweller, one that adheres to the Montreal Art-Health framework with culturally specific modifications that are fitting to the local Singaporean context.

Participants will be randomized into an intervention group of a passive control group. Participants in the intervention group will be invited to participate in the 12-week Singapore Art-Health Intervention held at the National Gallery Singapore. All participants will be invited to complete four online psychometric assessments. Participants in the intervention group will be invited to completed an additional post-intervention survey and a feasibility focus group.

Full description

Background: Population aging continues to be global health challenge. The prevalence of longstanding age-related conditions such as worsening physical, social, and mental health is expected to increase exponentially with a rapidly ageing population. The practice of participatory art in various settings has been found to be effective in the promotion, prevention and management of health and wellbeing conditions across the life span. However, its effect on health condition among the older population, particularly in the Asian context remains to be investigated. In Montreal, findings from a pilot study provided strong evidence to show that a 12-week, standardized "Art-Health" participatory art program had multidimensional positive effects on the health outcomes of older community dwelling participants including improvements in wellbeing, quality of life, and frail condition.

Current Proposal: The current research will adopt and modify the Montreal Art-Health participatory art framework with local cultural specificity (i.e. The Singapore Art-Health Intervention), and tests its effectiveness in healthy and wellness promotion among a sample of Singaporean older adults via a randomized control trial.

Research Design: The study adopts a participatory action research paradigm and a single-site, open-label Randomized Control Trial (RCT) design to develop and examine the effect of a standardized 12-week museum-based participatory art activity on health condition, wellbeing, and quality of life in older community dwellers.

Sampling and Randomization: Allowing for an attrition rate of 5% at follow-up, a target sample of 110 provides 90% power to detect an effect size of 0.55 (based on the results of the pilot study) between the intervention group and the control group at 5% level of significance (two-tailed test). Participants will be randomized into an intervention group of a passive control group. Participants in the intervention group will be invited to participate in the 12-week Singapore A-Health Intervention held at the National Gallery Singapore.

Intervention Design: The Singapore Art-Health Intervention will span 12 weeks, with each weekly session lasting for two hours. The program is designed to impart basic art appreciation skill (formal analysis in art) and art making techniques to participants through engagement with the collection at the museum.

Outcome measures and Data Analysis: All participants will be invited to complete four online psychometric assessments. Participants in the intervention group will be invited to completed an additional post-intervention survey and a feasibility focus group. For the quantitative data, between and within comparisons of outcomes will be conducted by mixed model analysis of variance (ANOVA), repeated measures ANOVA, and pairwise t-tests with Bonferroni correction. The focus group discussions will be analyzed using thematic analysis with a grounded theory approach to provide insights to the participant's experience and impact of the Singapore Art-Health Intervention.

Importance of Research: The current research will develop and test the effectiveness of a culturally-specific Art-Health participatory art program on health and wellness promotion among a sample of Singaporean older adults. Working collaboratively with the National Gallery Singapore in program development and implementation will serve to ensure program sustainability upon research completion. This collaboration will also foster practice and knowledge transfer to accelerate creative ageing in the local society. Moreover, the findings will contribute to an international RCT for evaluating a standardized participatory art framework to address the impact of population ageing. It will be a potential breakthrough in the development of an efficient art and museum program for older adults locally and internationally.

Enrollment

112 patients

Sex

All

Ages

60 to 99 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • individuals above the age of 60,
  • fluent in English
  • able to access the internet to complete the online psychometric assessments

Exclusion criteria

  • unable to provide informed consent
  • diagnosed with mental health conditions

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

112 participants in 2 patient groups

Singapore A-Health Group
Experimental group
Description:
A 12-week professionally led participatory art program at the gallery with each week comprising one 2-hour art session, totaling 24 hours of museum tours and participatory art activities.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Singapore A-Health Intervention
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
No art-based activities offered and advised not to participate in concurrent health and art-based interventions during the 12-week research period.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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