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“A window of looking at the good, bad, and the stress:” A mixed-methods art therapy study with hospitalized adult burn patients
Journal article   Peer reviewed

“A window of looking at the good, bad, and the stress:” A mixed-methods art therapy study with hospitalized adult burn patients

Bani Malhotra, Linwood R. Haith, Patricia A. Shewokis, Johanna Czamanski-Cohen, Minjung Shim, Megan Stair-Buchmann and Girija Kaimal
Burns, v 52(2), 107821
Mar 2026
PMID: 41455302
Featured in Collection :   Drexel's Newest Publications

Abstract

Art therapy Emotion regulation Expression Mixed methods research Psychosocial outcomes Burns
Improving psychosocial functioning in hospitalized burn survivors involves minimizing distress and pain and fostering emotion regulation. Art therapy could uniquely address the non-verbal aspects of distressing experiences, facilitating healthy emotional expression. This small N mixed-methods study examined the effect of 4-session art therapy intervention among 12 adult hospitalized burn patients on psychosocial outcomes of distress (Distress thermometer), affect (Positive and Negative Affect Schedule), change-perception (Patient Global Impression of Change), pain (Graphic Numeric Rating Scale), and self-expression and regulation (Self-Expression and Emotion Regulation in Art Therapy Scale, SERATS). Quantitative results using repeated ANOVA showed significant improvements in distress (F[1,9]=6.84, p = .028), positive affect (F[1,8]=5.5, p = 0.047), negative affect (F[1,8]=8.12, p = .022), and pain (F[1,9]=13.22, p = .005) across the four sessions. The global percentage change indicated positive trends in the outcomes. Changes did not reach statistical significance within-sessions. One-sample t-test showed a significant improvement in patients’ impression of change (t[10]=−4.183, two-sided p = .002) with mean responses approaching ‘much improved.’ Patients perceived art therapy as fostering emotional expression and regulation ‘often’ indicated by mean response scores approaching “4” for each item on SERATS. Thematic analysis elaborated on symptom management, expanded expression and perspective with art serving as tangible reminders, and creative engagement across sessions and with varied art media. Mixed-methods integration demonstrated congruent findings across art therapy sessions. Art therapy can be a viable intervention to boost psychosocial health in hospitalized burn patients. •Art therapy can improve psychosocial adjustment by fostering emotion expression.•It broadens perspective, serves tangible reminders, and encourages tactile engagement.•Mixed-methods approach shows benefits of art therapy for adult burn patients.•Art therapy-at bedside reduces negative symptoms and facilitates positive outcomes.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Critical Care Medicine
Dermatology
Surgery
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