Highlights
- A further data analysis was performed from a randomised control trial about the effects of art therapy for patients with personality disorders.
- Art therapy had large effects on symptom distress, flexibility, well-being, mindfulness and schema modes.
- Art therapy was as effective at reducing mental illness as it was at improving positive mental health.
- Positive mental health and mental illness should be considered as two sides of the same coin.
The distinction between mental health and mental illness has long been the subject of debate, especially in the last decade where there has been a shift in focus in mental health care from symptom reduction to the improvement of positive mental health.
Art therapists have been influenced by this shift. In this study, we investigated
- whether art therapy improves mental health and/or reduces mental illness; and
- what the relationship is between mental health and mental illness.
We used repeated measures ANOVA and effect sizes to examine the effects of art therapy and the Pearson correlation to examine the relationship between illness and health outcomes.
Results indicated significant effects of art therapy in both domains.
Furthermore, after creation of a single mental health and a mental illness score we found that the correlation between them was high.
We conclude that art therapy both promotes mental health and reduces mental illness. The large correlation between these domains in patients with personality disorders suggests that we might be dealing with two sides of the same coin.
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