The evidence for arts and health is compelling — creative engagement reduces anxiety, alleviates depression, improves cognitive function, reduces pain perception, and builds social connection. Arts in healthcare settings reduce length of hospital stay and medication use. Music therapy improves outcomes for dementia, stroke, and mental health conditions. Community arts reduce isolation and build community cohesion. Grant funding supports the practitioners, programmes, and organisations bringing creativity to health and wellbeing contexts.
Mental health
Arts participation is associated with:
- Reduced depression and anxiety symptoms
- Improved self-esteem and confidence
- Sense of purpose and meaning
- Social connection and reduced isolation
- Self-expression for people who struggle with verbal communication
Physical health
Social outcomes
Australia Council for the Arts
The Australia Council funds the arts broadly — arts and health is a recognised strand:
- Arts practice grants for artists working in health contexts
- Organisations grants for arts and health organisations
- First Nations arts and health
Creative partnerships Australia
Facilitates business and philanthropic investment in arts — some arts and health programmes.
State arts agencies
Each state arts funding agency funds arts in health:
- Arts NSW
- Creative Victoria
- Queensland Arts
- Arts South Australia
- Arts and Culture WA
Health funders
Some health funders now recognise arts as health intervention:
- PHNs (some fund arts in mental health)
- State health departments (arts in hospital programmes)
- Hospital foundations (arts and healing environments)
- Cancer councils (arts for cancer patients)
Philanthropy
Creative arts therapies
Professionally-trained therapists using arts as therapeutic modality:
- Music therapy (AMTA accredited therapists)
- Art therapy (ANZACATA accredited)
- Drama therapy
- Dance movement therapy
- Play therapy (children)
These are clinical interventions requiring registered practitioners — funded through:
- NDIS (some participants use plans for creative arts therapy)
- Private health insurance (music therapy covered by some funds)
- Hospital and health services
- Philanthropic grants (particularly in palliative care, aged care, mental health)
Arts in hospital settings
Music therapy
Evidence-based therapeutic use of music:
- Dementia (music preserves memory, reduces agitation)
- Stroke rehabilitation (Neurologic Music Therapy)
- Cancer patients (reducing anxiety and pain)
- Premature infants in NICU
- Palliative care
- Mental health inpatient settings
Arts and ageing
Arts and mental health
Arts and disability
Community arts for wellbeing
First Nations arts and healing
Social prescribing — connecting patients to community activities including arts — is growing in Australia:
- GPs referring patients to arts programmes
- Arts on prescription models
- Community Link Workers connecting people to arts activities
- Integration of arts into health service pathways
Outcome evidence
Arts and health benefits are real but require evidence. Use validated tools:
- Wellbeing: WHO-5, PHQ-9 (depression), GAD-7 (anxiety)
- Quality of life: EQ-5D
- Dementia-specific: Quality of Life in Alzheimer's
- Arts-specific wellbeing tools where available
Professional standards
Distinguish between professional creative arts therapies (requiring registered practitioners) and community arts and health (facilitated creative activities). Both are valuable but different. Funders in health contexts expect clinical standards for therapeutic programmes.
Artist welfare
Arts in health contexts can be challenging emotionally — show that your programme supports artists and therapists as well as participants.
Dual benefit
Show arts and health benefits to both individual participants and the broader community — social outcomes from arts are often as significant as individual health outcomes.
Cross-sector collaboration
Arts and health requires collaboration between arts and health sectors — practitioners, funders, and language differ. Show genuine cross-sector partnership.
Tahua's grants management platform supports arts funders and health funders investing in arts and wellbeing — with programme participant tracking, health outcome measurement, arts engagement data, and the reporting tools that help arts and health funders demonstrate the intersection of creativity and wellbeing across their funded programmes.