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5 results for "creative activities"

Museum Trips Add 3+ Years to Your Life, Study Finds
Health & Wellness2h ago

Museum Trips Add 3+ Years to Your Life, Study Finds

Visiting museums, reading books, and attending concerts can extend your life by more than three years, according to breakthrough research from University College London. The study found that weekly arts engagement slows biological aging as effectively as regular exercise.

Upworthy2 min read
Museum Visits Linked to Slower Aging, Study Finds
Health & WellnessMay 17

Museum Visits Linked to Slower Aging, Study Finds

Going to museums and doing creative activities might actually slow down aging in your DNA, according to new research from the UK. The effects are comparable to those seen from regular exercise.

Fox News Health2 min read
Hospitals Now Prescribe Art Classes as Medical Treatment
Health & WellnessMar 30

Hospitals Now Prescribe Art Classes as Medical Treatment

Doctors are officially prescribing dance, painting, and museum visits to treat Parkinson's, depression, and chronic illness. The results are so powerful that hospitals are hiring full-time artists and writing creative activities into patient treatment plans.

Reasons to be Cheerful2 min read
Science Confirms: Art Activities Boost Mental & Physical Health
Health & WellnessFeb 19

Science Confirms: Art Activities Boost Mental & Physical Health

Scientists are now proving what many have felt all along: creative activities like music, dance, and art actually change your brain and body in measurable ways. A groundbreaking summit in New York will teach people how to use art as a wellness tool.

Womens Health2 min read
Arts Engagement Reduces Inflammation, Study Finds
Health & WellnessJan 24

Arts Engagement Reduces Inflammation, Study Finds

Scientists discovered that singing, dancing, and enjoying creative activities trigger biological changes that reduce inflammation and protect brain health. The largest study of its kind reveals why the arts aren't just fun but genuinely good medicine.

New Scientist2 min read