ORIGINAL RESEARCH
The aesthetic and cultural interests of patients attending an acute
hospital – a phenomenological study
Hilary Moss & Desmond O’Neill
Accepted for publication 27 April 2013
Correspondence to H. Moss:
e-mail: mosshi@tcd.ie
Hilary Moss MBA DipMTh
Director of Arts and Health
National Centre for Arts and Health,
Tallaght Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
Desmond O’Neill MD FRCPI FRCP
Professor of Gerontology
Centre for Ageing, Neurosciences and the
Humanities, Trinity Centre for Health
Sciences, Tallaght Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
MOSS H. & O’NEILL D. (2014) The aesthetic and cultural interests of patients
attending an acute hospital – a phenomenological study. Journal of Advanced
Nursing 70(1), 121–129. doi: 10.1111/jan.12175
Abstract
Aim. To describe the aesthetic and cultural pursuits of older patients in hospital.
Background. Although there is much discussion of the importance of arts – used
in this paper to refer to all art forms, as currently listed by the Arts Council of
Ireland www.artscouncil.ie – in health, little is known about the salience of
aesthetic and cultural pursuits of hospital patients.
Design. A qualitative, hermeneutic phenomenological study examined artistic and
cultural interests and experiences of older hospital patients and their perceptions
of aesthetics of hospital.
Methods. A phenomenological study was carried out in 2011, using purposeful
sampling with 20 inpatients aged over 65. Patients were selected from the
geriatric medicine day hospital of a university teaching hospital, 10 had
experience of the hospital arts programme.
Results. Seven themes identified: loss and the impact of illness on leisure
activities; patients’ interests and passions; a lack of expectation of arts in hospital;
the positive impact of arts in hospital for those who had experienced them;
varying preference between receptive and participative arts activity according to
phase of illness; aesthetic aspects of the hospital experience; recommendations for
changes to improve arts in hospital.
Conclusions. Aesthetic and cultural interests are important in the lives of older
patients admitted to hospital. Illness can create barriers to artistic engagement.
Participation in arts activities may be more important during recovery and
rehabilitation, with receptive arts being more popular during the acute phase of
illness in hospital. Further research recommended on the role of the aesthetic
environment for patients’ health and well-being as well as receptive arts in
hospital.
Keywords: aesthetics, culture, gerontology, nursing, patients’ perspective,
phenomenology, qualitative methodology
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd 121
JAN
JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING