Cookies on this website

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click 'Accept all cookies' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. If you click 'Reject all non-essential cookies' only necessary cookies providing core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility will be enabled. Click 'Find out more' for information on how to change your cookie settings.

Optimising cultural provision to improve older people’s wellbeing through social prescribing in the context of COVID-19: Realist review and evaluation.

In recent years, the cultural sector (i.e. gardens and open spaces, galleries, museums, heritage sites, theatres, and libraries) has supported public wellbeing (e.g. by providing a space for relaxation and distraction, volunteering opportunities, or putting on activities for specific populations). Such provision can be considered as part of the ‘community assets’ (e.g. groups, organisations, charities, activities) that are central to social prescribing.

The COVID-19 pandemic is affecting what the cultural sector can offer, at a time when significant mental and/or social consequences of the crisis are anticipated (e.g. fear, low mood, money worries), especially among older people. From the outset, this population was identified as ‘at risk’ from the condition itself and responses to it (e.g. extreme loneliness). 

Our research will explore how the cultural sector adapts to support older people’s wellbeing. This will allow us to provide recommendations to the cultural sector about being 'referral-ready' (O’Neill, 2010) for social prescribing with older people in the context of the current pandemic and future ones. We will use a realist approach to explore what works, for whom, why and in what circumstances. This will involve developing a programme theory on how the cultural sector might be best mobilised and engaged to support older people's resilience during and after the pandemic.

For details on the objectives associated with this project, click here.

For further information on how we will conduct the research, click here.

For the rapid realist review protocol, click here.

 

This research is funded by UKRI/AHRC (AH/V008781/1).

Our team

  • Kamal R. Mahtani
    Kamal R. Mahtani

    GP & Professor of Evidence Based Healthcare

  • Stephanie Tierney
    Stephanie Tierney

    Departmental Lecturer and Senior Researcher

  • Geoff Wong
    Geoff Wong

    Associate Professor of Primary Care

  • Amadea Turk
    Amadea Turk

    NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow

  • Helen Chatterjee
    Helen Chatterjee

    Professor of Biology, Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London

  • Kerryn Husk
    Kerryn Husk

    PenARC Senior Research Fellow, Peninsula Medical School, University of Plymouth

  • Kathryn Eccles
    Kathryn Eccles

    Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institution, University of Oxford

  • Caroline Potter
    Caroline Potter

    Senior Research Fellow, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford

  • Harriet Warburton
    Harriet Warburton

    Research and Impact Manager, Oxford University Gardens, Libraries and Museums

  • Beth McDougall
    Beth McDougall

    Community Engagement Officer: Older People, Oxford University Gardens, Libraries and Museums

  • Jordan Gorenberg
    Jordan Gorenberg

    Researcher in Health Services

  • Lucy Shaw
    Lucy Shaw

    Head of Programme and Partnerships, Oxford University Gardens, Libraries & Museums (GLAM)

  • Emma Webster
    Emma Webster

    Research and Impact Support Officer, Oxford University Gardens, Libraries & Museums (GLAM)