Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
Owensboro Health Arts Council Presentation_11_15
1. 1
November 12 & 13, 2015
Steve Johnson
Ann Kincheloe
Debbie Zuerner Johnson
2. THE OWENSBORO HEALTH JOURNEY
I. Supporting “the Arts”
II. The Hospital Project
• The Owensboro Health Interior/Art
Committee
• The art selection process
• Imagery
III. Arts in Medicine and the Healing
Environment
IV. The Future of Arts in Medicine and the
Healing Environment at Owensboro Health
2
3. VISION
To become a regional center of excellence by actively listening and partnering
to meet the individual healthcare needs of those we serve.
MISSION
Owensboro Health exists to heal the sick and to
improve the health of the communities we serve.
CORE COMMITMENTS
Excellence | Innovation | Integrity | Respect | Service | Teamwork
3
7. TOTAL GRANT FUNDING FOR FISCAL YEAR 2016:
$702,924.70
Owensboro Museum of Fine Art
• Program: RiverArtes II
Amount: $18,000
RiverPark Center
• Program: Broadway Pay What You Can
Affordability Program
Amount: $18,000
International Bluegrass Music Museum
• Program: ROMP 2016
Amount: $20,000
Owensboro Dance Theatre
• Program: Teaching in Outreach, Here's to
Your Heart, Special Needs Dance Therapy
Amount: $12,000
Owensboro Dance Theatre
• Program: In Concert, Dance Ambassadors,
Triple A, Migrant Health Initiative
Amount: $13,000
Owensboro Museum of Science and History
• Program: Discovery Owensboro - Discover
the World, health program exhibit
Amount: $20,000
Back Alley Musicals
• Program: Expanding Musical Access through
Community Enrichment, Transportation, and
Education
Amount: $8,000
Owensboro Symphony Orchestra
• Program: Musicians “On Call”
Amount: $18,000
Theatre Workshop of Owensboro
• Program: Empress Renovation
Amount: $18,000
7
12. Create a safe, patient centered environment
Improve the ease of patient access to services
Increase inpatient bed capacity
Expand and reconfigure service lines
Increase capacity of all invasive services
Enhance location of outpatient services relative to
inpatient
Expand and/or relocate services as it relates to the
business plan
Provide and support technology and information
system enhancements
MASTER PLAN FACILITY GOALS
12
20. HOLISTIC HEALTH
Viewing man in his totality within a wide
ecological spectrum, and … emphasizing the
view that ill health or disease is brought about
by an imbalance, or disequilibrium, of man in his
total ecological system and not only by the
causative agent and pathogenic evolution
The World Health Organization (WHO)
20
23. CREATING A HEALING ENVIRONMENT
23
• Establish visual and performing art guidelines
• Donation and exhibiting guidelines
PURPOSE
24. CREATING A HEALING ENVIRONMENT
24
MISSION
• Holistic in nature with awareness for mind, body and spirit
• Consideration also to those who support patients during
their healing process
• Plays positive role in treatment and healing process of
those in our care
• About planning, acquisition, placing and caring for these
elements in public areas of the campus, including building
lobbies, exterior walls, walkways, gardens and main
entrances
25. 25
Program components might include:
• Permanent art collection
• Artists in public spaces
• Folk arts
• Dance
• Music
• Community Art Projects
• Drama
• Gardens/outdoor healing spaces
• Art Tours of permanent exhibits
• Community participation events
CREATING A HEALING ENVIRONMENT
SCOPE
Introductions
This will be an open dialogue and I will serve as the moderator
Read
Background: Who we are
Our coverage
Impact: Note community commitment
Long standing support for the arts:
Debbie and grant program
The grant funding process begins in the spring with community grant information sessions. Organizations submit letters of intent and if approved to continue, they submit a formal grant proposal. Owensboro Health also offers a mini-grant program, year-round, for community event sponsorships and smaller health-related projects. (Note: We allocate $60,000.00 in mini grant funds annually.)
Debbie
Steve overview of Harvest Market
Debbie on the art of a healthy life
Background on the hospital project
The old
Board plans: Read
Arts was not specifically mentioned
That was the vision that Ann will discuss
Its hard to know where you are going if you don’t know where you have been.
Let’s look at where we were.
Much anticipation what we wanted in the new faculty.
Many involved and engaged.
This video helps to capture that.
Which takes us to arts in medicine and the healing environment.
This important perspective is echoed in the organization's 1946 preamble, wherein health is defined as a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being rather than merely the absence of disease or infirmity.
Implied in this definition is the tie to health outcomes or changes in health as a result of an action; in the present case, the connection between artistic engagement and the psychosocial and biological manifestations of that connection. More specifically, there is evidence that engagement with artistic activities, either as an observer of the creative efforts of others or as an initiator of one's own creative efforts, can enhance one's moods, emotions, and other psychological states as well as have a salient impact on important physiological parameters.
For those unfamiliar with arts in medicine, or the healing environment as we call it, I have a short video produced by UF health.
The idea that creative expression can make a powerful contribution to the healing process has been embraced in many different cultures. Throughout recorded history, people have used pictures, stories, dances, and chants as healing rituals.27 there has been much philosophical and anecdotal discussion about the benefits of art and healing, but less empirical research exists in the literature. In fact, although arts therapy has been used clinically for more than a century28 and has been recognized as a profession since 1991,29 much of the published work is theoretical in nature, with little discussion of specific outcomes.13,30 Only in recent years have systematic and controlled studies examined the therapeutic effects and benefits of the arts and healing.31
Nevertheless, we have seen positive outcomes for the potential of using art to promote healing in our 4 primary areas of focus. This article is not meant to be a comprehensive review of all of the literature available (other authors have provided comprehensive overviews in areas such as music therapy32 and expressive writing33). Instead, it represents a sampling of the many potential benefits of art in enhancing health and wellness.
There is evidence that use of art and music reduces hospital stays, with studies showing earlier discharges among patients taking part in visual and performing arts interventions than among those not doing so.69,70 In 1 study, surgery or critical care patients who participated in guided imagery or had a picture of a landscape on their wall had a decreased need of narcotic pain medication relative to their counterparts and left the hospital earlier.71,72 Evaluations of art projects can link the benefits of creative expression to healing and greater wellness.
With that background, allow me to introduce Ann Kincheloe who lead these efforts and was a volunteer board member at the time.
So gives us some background on the committee and how you got started.
You created a policy as well.
Go over slides.
Music Engagement
Music is the most accessible and most researched medium of art and healing, and there has been a principal emphasis on the soothing capacity of music and its ability to offset overly technological approaches to care.34In particular, music therapy has been shown to decrease anxiety.35–37 The pleasure shared by participants in the healing process through a music therapy program can help to restore emotional balance as well.38 There is also evidence of the effectiveness of auditory stimulation, together with a strong suggestion that such stimulation abolishes pain, as a strategy for achieving control over pain.39
In addition, it has been shown that music can calm neural activity in the brain,40 which may lead to reductions in anxiety, and that it may help to restore effective functioning in the immune system partly via the actions of the amygdala and hypothalamus. As the activity levels of neurons in the central nucleus of the amygdala decrease in response to calming effects of music, there may be corresponding reductions in the signals being sent to other parts of the brain. Table 1 outlines the results of key studies we reviewed that focused on music engagement.2
Now tell us about the selection process.
Let me show a few of the images.
How many pieces are there in the facility do you know?
So you assembled the pieces around the hospital.
Let’s take a look at some of these pieces as they are placed.
Tell us the story about the pieces here.
The next slide is probably the most telling.
The old to the new.
Doesn’t show the view.
But you didn’t just stop on the inside.
You also have more work on the outside.
Tell us about that process.
Location
Location
Tell us about this.
Mention the seeds
This piece is my favorite.
Located outside the windows of mother baby and the NICU
Outstanding pieces by a local artist that resides in Louisville.
Is this Mind, Body or Soul.
Is this Mind, Body or Soul.
Is this Mind, Body or Soul.
There are not this close together.
This is also another great story.
And while all this is beautiful, we are not done.
We are now working to realize the full extent of the policy that was adopted.
Debbie Johnson is now leading this work and she can tell you more about that.
So let me close with another short video. Now that you know more about the facility, perhaps the video will resonate more with you.
We welcome you in our facility any time.