What Your Patients are Hearing

Meditation affects genes, inflammation; art prescribed as medicine


 

Dr. Doty is author of Into the Magic Shop: A Neurosurgeon’s Quest to Discover the Mysteries of the Brain and the Secrets of the Heart,” (New York: Penguin, 2016), and senior editor of the Oxford Handbook of Compassion Science.

Rx: Go visit an art exhibit

An innovative medical initiative has some Montreal physicians writing prescriptions for patients that, instead of leading them to the pharmacy, takes them to a local art museum.

Médecins francophones du Canada, a doctors’ organization based mainly in the province of Quebec, has partnered with the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) in providing free museum passes to patients.

Physician members of Médecins francophones du Canada can be approved to issue up to 50 prescriptions for a visit to MMFA collections and exhibitions. This is meant to complement existing and more traditional treatment.

The intent, according to the museum’s chief curator and director general, Nathalie Bondil, is to provide a “relaxing, revitalizing experience, a moment of respite” for those burdened physically or mentally by illness. “We can open new doors, not just for the patients, but also for the doctors,” she remarks in an interview with BBC News.

Patients also can avail themselves of the museum’s art therapy programs. “The neutral, beautiful, inspiring space” of museums like MMFA helps improve a patient’s mood and well-being,” Ms. Bondil says. Contemplating a painting or other artwork can, at least temporarily, take the patient to a mental space not dominated by illness-related worry, fear, anger, and sadness.

The idea of art as medicine is echoed elsewhere. A 2017 report in the United Kingdom recognized the vital contribution of the arts to health and well-being.

Lady Gaga describes health crisis

From a distance, the life of Lady Gaga might seem exotic and desirable. But the musician and actress recently revealed her own “mental health crisis” – and urged Hollywood to make better mental health care available to those in the entertainment business.

Her work also features multiple deadlines, and the pressure can prove overwhelming. “I began to notice that I would stare off into space and black out for seconds or minutes. I would see flashes of things I was tormented by, experiences that were filed away in my brain with ‘I’ll deal with you later’ for many years because my brain was protecting me, as science teaches us. These were also symptoms of disassociation and PTSD and I did not have a team that included mental health support,” according to an article in Variety reporting a speech by the entertainer, whose birth name is Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta.

The anguish she felt morphed into physical chronic pain, fibromyalgia, panic attacks, acute trauma responses, and debilitating declines in her mental health – including thoughts of suicide. One root of the trauma might have been a sexual assault that she says she experienced during childhood.

“I wish there had been a system in place to protect and guide me, a system in place to empower me to say no to things I felt I had to do, a system in place to empower me to stay away from toxic work environments or working with people who were of seriously questionable character,” she says. “There were days that I struggled or couldn’t make it to work, and I don’t want that for other artists or anyone.”

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