Museums can help foster social inclusion and improve the overall health status of older adults. Paradoxically, many older people who complied with social distancing measures also suffered from the 2019 coronavirus pandemic, as this lockdown may have accelerated processes leading to physical frailty and increased risks to mental health.
This study aimed to examine whether a three-month cycle of weekly virtual visits to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) could improve feelings of social inclusion, well-being and quality of life, and reduce physical frailty among community-dwelling older adults in Montreal.
A total of 106 older adults living in Montreal (Quebec, Canada) were recruited into a two-arm randomized clinical trial (intervention n=53 vs control n=53) conducted between January and April 2022. The intervention consisted of a 3-month cycle of weekly virtual MMFA visits. Social isolation, well-being, quality of life and frailty were assessed using validated scales administered on a web platform at baseline (M0) and after 3 months (M3) in the intervention group. The control group completed the same assessments on the same schedule. Outcomes were mean scores at M0 and M3, and changes in mean scores between M0 and M3.
The intervention group showed significant improvements in social isolation, well-being, quality of life and frailty scores compared with the control group, with the greatest benefits observed for frailty.
These results suggest that a three-month cycle of weekly virtual MMFA visits can improve social inclusion and the physical and mental health of community-dwelling older adults in Montreal.
Project registration | NCT05046288; Title: A 3-month Cycle of Weekly Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Tours to Promote Social Inclusion, Well-being, Quality of Life and Health in Older Community Members Experiencing Social Isolation; First posted date: September 8, 2021; prospectively registered; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05046288

EVENTS

Presentation of Results – Museum Visit Program
Latest Podcasts & Videos
CREATivity in Action: Stories of Digital Practices
Digital creativity is transforming the ways we produce and interact. Two researchers from CREAT—Philippe Vaucher, professor in the Unité d’enseignement et de recherche en création et nouveaux médias at the Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue (UQAT), and Louis-Philippe Rondeau, also a professor at the École des arts numériques de l’animation et du design at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (NAD/UQAC)—shed light on current innovations in this field.
“L’écho des Plantes” : An Ecological and Poetic Opera
Is it possible to create an opera with plants?
This episode takes you inside a groundbreaking artistic initiative.
Imagined in collaboration with teenagers, L’Écho des Plantss is a transdisciplinary opera that brings together living systems, the arts, and science in a dynamic dialogue.
Charlotte Gagnon (Manager of Social Action and Education at Opéra de Montréal / Co-founder and Co-Artistic & Executive Director of Productions Rigoletta) and Antoine Bellemare (multidisciplinary artist and postdoctoral researcher) take us behind the scenes of this collective creation, where emotions, plant signals, and words intertwine to shape a new way of listening to the world.
Understanding Regional Dynamics
Cultural communities in the regions of Quebec face unique challenges, but also promising opportunities. Two members of CREAT, Valérie Yobé, Associate Professor at the School of Arts and Cultures (ÉdAC) at the Université du Québec en Outaouais (UQO), and Hamed Motaghi, Associate Professor in the Department of Administrative Sciences at the same institution, share their research on regional cultural dynamics and their impact on territorial development.