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Review Article

The Use of Arts-Based Research in Chronic Pain: A Scoping Review

, , Ph.D., MSN, RNORCID Icon, , MA, & , Ph.D., MD, FRCPC
Article: 2352876 | Received 28 Aug 2023, Accepted 05 May 2024, Accepted author version posted online: 08 May 2024
Accepted author version

Abstract

Background

As an emerging approach, arts-based research holds potential to advance understanding of the complex and multidimensional experiences of chronic pain and means of communicating this experiential evidence. This scoping review aimed to map and explore the extent of arts-based research in chronic non-cancer pain, understand the rationale behind using arts-based research methods, and identify directions for future research.

Methods

Databases PsycINFO, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL were searched for eligible English-language articles from inception to November 2022. Out of 1321 article titles and abstracts screened for eligibility, 18 articles underwent full-text screening, with 14 ultimately meeting all inclusion criteria. We conducted a narrative synthesis of data extracted from the 14 reviewed articles.

Results

The review articles focused on a wide range of chronic non-cancer pain conditions, with 12/14 (86%) employing qualitative methods, one repeated measures in an experimental design, and another a multi-phase, multi-method design. Seven articles described the use of drawing, painting, or mixed-media artwork, four used photography, two used body mapping, and one used e-book creation. The rationale for arts-based research included exploring and better understanding patients’ experiences with chronic non-cancer pain, constructing an intervention, and investigating or validating a clinical tool. Nine articles reported that their arts-based research methods produced unintended therapeutic benefits for participants. Recommendations for future research included using arts-based research to better understand and communicate with patients and providers, exploring convergence with art therapy, and designing creative and flexible multi-phased studies involving collaboration across disciplines.

Conclusions

Despite the wide variation in sample and art modalities across reviewed articles, arts-based methods were considered suitable and highly effective for investigating chronic non-cancer pain.

Disclaimer

As a service to authors and researchers we are providing this version of an accepted manuscript (AM). Copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proofs will be undertaken on this manuscript before final publication of the Version of Record (VoR). During production and pre-press, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal relate to these versions also.

Introduction

Chronic non-cancer pain is a serious healthcare issue worldwide. A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis of studies from 40 countries found prevalence rates ranging from 8.7% to 64.4%, with a pooled mean of 31%.Citation1 Chronic pain is defined as pain that persists or recurs for over three months and can be classified as chronic primary or one of six secondary pain syndromes.Citation2 Chronic primary pain is pain in one or more anatomical regions that persists or recurs longer than three months and is associated with significant emotional distress or functional disability and cannot be better accounted for by another chronic pain condition.Citation2 This pain can be the sole or leading complaint and can be conceived as a distinct disease requiring special treatment and care. In six other subgroups, pain is secondary to, and a symptom of, underlying disease and referred to as chronic secondary pain syndromes: chronic cancer-related pain, chronic neuropathic pain, chronic secondary visceral pain, chronic posttraumatic and postsurgical pain, chronic secondary headache or orofacial pain, and chronic secondary musculoskeletal pain.Citation2

Tremendous strides have been made in conceptualizing chronic pain as a multidimensional, dynamic, reciprocal interaction among biological, psychological, and social factors, and developing assessment techniques and pain management interventions.Citation3 However, in practice, there tends to be a rather narrow focus on biological and physiological aspects and pain severity, with the use of ordinal pain scales that limit understanding of the experience and impact of the condition on daily life.Citation4 Further, the prognosis for chronic pain is often uncertain, varies considerably between patients, and is overlooked or dismissed by clinicians.Citation5, Citation6 In the face of ineffective treatment, chronic pain can clearly threaten a robust sense of hope for the future. Chronic pain has the potential to severely affect the quality of life of individuals, such that they experience diminished functioning in virtually every domain of life, including employment, relationships, physical well-being, emotional/mental well-being, and engagement in hobbies.Citation5−7 Unaddressed and unresolved psychosocial challenges can have devastating outcomes, with suicide rates for chronic pain sufferers double that of the general population.Citation8 Along with psychosocial interventions to augment the treatment of chronic pain itself, novel approaches that support and enable people to live and even thrive in the context of chronic pain are needed. Arts-based research might represent a novel approach to evidence generation of relevance given the current state of chronic pain evidence.

Arts-based research is an emerging qualitative research approach; it refers to the use of any art form (or combinations thereof) by the researcher and/or participants at any point in the research process to generate, interpret, and/or communicate knowledge.Citation9, Citation10 Despite this definition, it is noteworthy that a growing variety of approaches and art forms or modalities fall under the general rubric of arts-based research. Common rationale for using arts-based research include providing rich descriptions, highlighting and enhancing an understanding of people’s lived experiences and meanings of illness, and attending to contextual factors.Citation10 This methodological approach could be especially valuable for enhancing comprehension of health conditions lacking established illness trajectories, diagnostic consensus, or effective interventions, such as chronic pain. Arts-based research can also facilitate novel dissemination of findings and enhance knowledge translation strategies. There are several reasons why arts-based health research can also provide a powerful stimulus for change: it can make research accessible without oversimplification; it can create a safe place for dialogue about challenging issues; it can trigger emotional engagement to facilitate change, and challenge academic or authoritative representations of research.Citation11

We could locate no review that examined how arts-based research is used to understand and communicate about chronic non-cancer pain, though several reviews describe the use of art therapy as treatment.Citation12−15 Understanding the breadth and depth of arts-based research used in chronic non-cancer pain research is foundational to identifying emerging trends, research gaps, and areas for future research or action. To achieve this, we conducted a scoping review to map the potentially large and diverse literature, aiming to explore the extent of arts-based research as a process and product in chronic non-cancer pain investigations and understand the rationale behind using arts-based research.

Methods

We followed scoping review methodological guidance articulated by Arksey and O’MalleyCitation16 and Levac and colleagues,Citation17 which included a process of identifying the research questions, identifying relevant articles, article selection, data charting and extraction, and collating, summarizing and reporting the review results. Our conducting and reporting of this review were guided by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines and checklist.Citation18

Identification of the Research Question

We designed this scoping review to answer the research questions: 1) what is the extent of arts-based research as a process and product in chronic non-cancer pain investigations, and 2) what are the rationales behind using arts-based research? Collectively, our team conducts clinical and basic research on endometriosis-associated chronic pain with interest in the utility of qualitative and arts-based methodologies to understand people’s experiences and to develop and disseminate novel patient-facing materials. This interest stems from ongoing collaborations with the Endometriosis Patient Advisory Board at the British Columbia Women’s Hospital and Health Centre, which has advocated for creative methods for research and knowledge translation. However, patient partners were not involved as research team members in conducting this scoping review due to the lack of funding for this project. We firmly believe that patient partners should be appropriately compensated for their valuable time and contributions.

Identification of Relevant Articles

We identified relevant published literature from four medical databases: MEDLINE (Ovid), PsycINFO, EMBASE, and CINAHL. Database search strategies were constructed in consultation with a medical librarian at the University of British Columbia. We identified keywords and subject terms for the two main concepts of chronic pain (chronic pain, persistent pain, long-term pain, long term pain) and arts-based research, including search terms for diverse art genres (arts-based research, arts based research, arts-informed research, arts informed research, film, poetry, painting, drawing, body mapping, digital storytelling, music, song, theatre), combining these using Boolean logic. We refined the search several times based on identified keywords in relevant articles and applied these to subsequent searches. We ended up using the same search strategy across databases because the controlled vocabulary for the chronic pain concept, as well as the relevant keywords for chronic pain and arts-based methods, yielded the most relevant articles. We conducted forward and backward reference chaining where we searched the citations in the reference lists of all relevant articles. We also identified subsequent articles that had cited the relevant articles already included. The search strategy was undertaken between July - August 2021, then repeated in November 2022. Please see the Supplementary Materials for the search terms used across databases.

Article Selection

For inclusion, articles were empirical; published in English language peer-reviewed journals; focused on participants living with chronic primary or secondary pain as per medical definitions; and utilized arts-based research methods of data collection. We included articles where the sample was predominantly composed of adults (19 years of age or greater). The review was directed towards chronic non-cancer pain because the main conditions we were interested in (e.g., endometriosis, chronic pelvic pain, fibromyalgia, chronic unexplained pain) are benign pain conditions and, therefore, distinct from cancer in their causes of pain, treatment approaches, and supportive care services offered. Other exclusion criteria included all grey literature, discussion papers, other reviews, and investigations of art as therapy or arts-based treatments for chronic pain. Social media content investigations were also excluded because the postings comprising data collection were not based on art creation and/or included data from participants who did not experience chronic pain.

In total, 1661 citations were identified via database searches and 16 via hand searching, which were imported into the software platform Covidence, and 356 duplicate records were removed. Subsequent screening was done using Covidence. One reviewer screened the 1321 article titles and abstracts for eligibility using the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Two independent reviewers completed full-text screening of 18 articles, and a third reviewer was consulted to resolve disagreements. Fourteen articles met the inclusion criteria and comprised the data set for the scoping review (see : Scoping Review Flow Diagram).

Figure 1: Scoping Review Flow Diagram

Figure 1: Scoping Review Flow Diagram

Data Charting and Extraction

Data extraction was completed in a standardized format by one reviewer per document using Excel and double-checked by a second reviewer. We pilot-tested our data extraction form with a sample of five documents and met as a team to clarify elements for extraction. Two team members reviewed all extracted data and omissions or conflicts were resolved through robust team discussion. The following data were extracted from each article: sample size and participant characteristics (age, sex and/or gender, ethnicity, type or chronic pain, duration of pain), purpose, research methodology, research methods (data collection and data analysis), arts-based modality, the rationale for the arts-based modality, main findings, and recommendations for future research. We considered methodology to be the overarching approach guiding the research, encompassing the theoretical framework, principles, and logic behind the study or project design, whereas research methods encompassed the specific techniques and procedures involved in sampling, data collection, and data analysis. We considered arts-based modality to be the artistic practices, techniques, or tools (i.e., drawing, painting, photos) used by study or project participants.

Collating, Summarizing and Reporting the Results

The extraction phase was followed by a narrative synthesis of the research design/methodology, the arts-based modalities used, predominant rationales for conducting arts-based research, main study or project findings, and recommendations. This process allowed us to map the breadth of arts-based research in chronic pain, identify the main rationales for using arts-based research in a population living with chronic pain, and identify gaps and future directions in the literature. During the synthesis phase, it became evident that numerous articles described a therapeutic effect for study or project participants, and thus, we summarized these data as well.

Results

Fourteen articles met the inclusion criteria and comprised this scoping review (See for article details).Citation19−32 Almost half (n=6) were conducted in the UK; three originated in Canada; two in New Zealand; two in the USA; and one in Australia. None of the articles explicitly indicated that people with chronic pain were co-researchers or members of the research team. Sample sizes varied considerably from a case study of a woman with fibromyalgia who made pain drawings at three time pointsCitation27 to a study of 54 adults who each made one pain drawing.Citation28 Five articles described enrolling less than 9 participants; the remaining seven enrolled between 14 and 48 participants. All articles included women in their sample, with 5 also including menCitation19, Citation22, Citation23, Citation28, Citation30 and two including gender-diverse individualsCitation24, Citation26. Ages ranged across articles from 16 to 79 years. Of the articles that reported on ethnicity, participants were found to predominately self-report as WhiteCitation19, Citation21, Citation24, Citation25, Citation28. Twelve articles reported employing qualitative methodologies, such as phenomenology, narrative inquiry, or generic approaches, with methods of data collection primarily including focus groups, individual interviews, and the artwork itself;Citation19, Citation21−28, Citation30−32 one article indicated the use of repeated measures in an experimental design;Citation20 and another used a multi-phase, multi-method designCitation29. Arts-based modalities used included drawing/sketching (n=6),Citation19, Citation20, Citation22, Citation25, Citation27, Citation28 photos (n=4), Citation21, Citation23, Citation24, Citation32 painting (n=2), body mapping (n=2),Citation30, Citation31 e-book construction (n=1),Citation29 use of a pain diary on the process of observing and creating visual art (n=1),Citation26 and multi-modal art workshops (n=1).Citation31 In eight articles, artwork was treated as data and subjected to analysis by researchers, yet there was limited elaboration on the specifics of the artwork analysis.Citation19, Citation21,Citation22, Citation24, Citation25, Citation27, Citation28, Citation30

Articles focused on many types of chronic pain. Six investigated chronic pain

Table 1. Scoping Review - Arts-Based Research in Chronic Pain, N=14

in general, at multiple body sites.Citation21, Citation22, Citation26, Citation28, Citation31, Citation32 Two articles investigated pain in fibromyalgia;Citation27, Citation30 two articles investigated complex chronic pain cases.Citation19, Citation25 Abichandani et al.Citation20 focused on chronic neck pain; Hughes, Burton, & DempseyCitation23 focused on individuals with paraplegia-related pain; Reid et al.,Citation29 recruited family members to study chronic pain in children, and Kattari, & BeltránCitation24 focused on chronic pain in individuals with disabilities.

We present our findings across three themes that summarize patterns across articles in this scoping review: rationale for the use of arts-based research in chronic pain; therapeutic effects of arts-based research and modalities; and recommendations and directions in arts-based research on chronic pain.

Rationale for Use of Arts-Based Research in Chronic Pain

Arts-based research was employed to 1) explore and better understand the lived experience of chronic pain, 2) construct an intervention, and 3) investigate or validate a clinical tool for pain patients. See for details on rationales for studies or projects and the arts-based modality used. More than half the articles (n=7) indicated the use of visual arts-based modalities to better understand the lived experience of individuals with chronic pain.Citation19, Citation22−25, Citation30, Citation32 In four articles, drawing, painting, or body mapping (a process of creating life-size art-work that represents people’s identities within their social contexts) activities with participants yielded rich details about how chronic pain affects their interior worlds, self-identity, and emotional and psychological states.Citation19, Citation22, Citation25, Citation30 As acknowledged by Skop,Citation30 there is no single method of body mapping, and the aforementioned article utilized a wide variety of art techniques such as drawing, painting, and collage for participants to create their body maps. Three articles reported the use of photos to develop in-depth descriptions and understandings of individuals’ experiences with chronic pain.Citation23, Citation24, Citation32 The authors selected photovoice and photo-elicitation methods because they did not require artistic skill or coordination demanded by drawing and painting, and offered these patients a voice to improve healthcare communication and interventions. Several authors concluded that combining multiple qualitative methods, such as photovoice with interviews or focus groups, may empower patients to communicate their pain experience more effectively to healthcare professionals caring for them.Citation23, Citation32 Across articles, authors argued that the artwork and photos produced by participants captured and communicated subtleties and layers of their experience that discursive methods such as verbal interviews, clinical scales, or other text-based methods alone do not access.

Table 2. Rationales for Arts-Based Research in Chronic Pain

Two articles reported unique, multi-phased designs to construct a health

intervention. Reid et al.,Citation29 reported how researchers collected family member narratives from parents or carers of children with chronic pain, and these interviews were translated into an e-book by a creative writer. The evaluation concluded that parents preferred the image and narrative-based e-book to understand their child’s pain condition rather than standard health information. Purposely blurring the research process and outcome, Tarr et al.,Citation31 designed an intervention series of four workshops facilitated by professional artists to reframe patients’ perceptions of pain as an isolated individual experience. The performative focus of the arts-based study created a collective space that challenged both the participants’ views on pain and the researchers’ views on qualitative methods.Citation31

Four articles described utilizing visual methods to determine the validity of a clinical tool or approach, three of which confirmed the usefulness of pain drawings in clinical settings.Citation20, Citation27, 2820, Citation27, Citation28 Interestingly, the three articles that utilized “pain drawings” all did so in quite different ways. AbichandaniCitation20 refers to pain drawings as the product created when the patient shades or marks painful areas on an illustration of the human body. In research conducted by Phillips,Citation28 participants were instructed to visualize their pain as vividly as possible and draw this image in a blank space provided. Work by NizzaCitation27 follows a single participant, a female living with chronic pain, through three separate interviews. At each interview, the participant was asked to draw an image of her current pain, and the drawings were used to discuss the changing impact pain was having on her life. Alternatively, Barnes et al.,Citation21 used photovoice methods to validate the use of self-compassion to manage the emotional aspect of living with chronic pain that is not associated with a diagnosed health condition.

Therapeutic Effects of Arts-Based Research Methods

Nine articles, or two-thirds of the total included articles, discussed the presence of therapeutic outcomes due to the arts-based research used.Citation21, Citation22, Citation24−28, Citation30, Citation31 In some articles, therapeutic effects were noted by study or project participants themselves, while in other articles, these effects were observed and based on researcher interpretations. See for details.

Table 3. Therapeutic Effects of ABR

Therapeutic effects appeared to occur across various mediums utilized by researchers, including photovoice, modified photovoice, mixed media artwork, drawing, painting, and body mapping. Authors noted that the process of participation in making visual art assisted participants in managing the affective-emotional component of chronic pain;Citation21 and provided a novel means of managing chronic pain, including the psychological aspects of a changed identity that occurs over time with pain conditions.Citation22, Citation25−27 Three articles concluded that their arts-based research design was therapeutic because it constructed a collective space for participants to connect and share their experiences with others.Citation24, Citation30, Citation31 For many participants, these research workshops provided a new frame for perceiving and communicating about their pain, and in many instances, the group process was the first time their pain had been experienced as more than a solitary phenomenon to endure alone.

Several authors who observed therapeutic effects suggested arts-based methods as tools for specific practitioner groups. For instance, Lou et al.,Citation26 concluded that visual art creation and pain diaries can be effective tools for occupational therapists working with chronic pain patients. In a similar way, Henare et al.,Citation22 suggested the use of art therapy as an expressive medium for occupational therapists to incorporate into their practice. SkopCitation30 pointed to the value and importance of innovative methods such as body mapping for social work research. Interestingly, the design of Skop’sCitation30 study was borrowed and adapted from art therapy. The author noted that participants became calmer as they worked on their body maps, despite the significant time commitment in the study and its focus on barriers to healthcare access.

The considerable reportage in this scoping review on therapeutic outcomes for

participants in arts-based research indicate the complexity and perhaps futility of attempting to separate the research process from the research product. Tarr et al.,Citation31 highlighted this conceptual issue, stating that arts-based research can challenge what constitutes data for researchers, and that such a method itself is not simply a condition for data collection but inseparable from the data itself.

Recommendations and Future Directions in Arts-Based Research on Chronic Pain

Researchers in this emergent field of inquiry and approach to studying chronic pain

unanimously commended the use of arts-based research to better understand and communicate with patients. Several articles noted, as did Kirkham et al.,Citation25 that arts-based research demonstrates a “convergence with art therapy.” Art therapy was described as an emergent treatment for pain conditions and recommended as a potential avenue for future collaborative investigations into pain management.Citation25 Researchers from disciplines such as social work, psychology, and occupational therapy were more prone to make such connections. Articles from physician researchers were few in this field,Citation19, Citation20, Citation32 perhaps indicative that qualitative research methods remain on the margins of pain research in medicine. Medical treatments for chronic pain tend to use pain rating scales; however, participants in arts-based research have indicated a dislike for such numerical representations of their experience, preferring the use of visual diaries, for example.Citation26

The social aspects of chronic and complex pain, especially the way pain changes self-identity, produces the creation of a new ‘self’, and disrupts social connections, were identified as important areas for future research.Citation19, Citation23, Citation26 Hughes et al.,Citation23 argued that the neglect or misunderstanding of the social aspects of chronic pain might become a barrier to communication with providers and ultimately limit pain management itself. Arts-based research was positioned as a means of assisting patients with strategies to redefine themselves and their life,Citation22 with means of doing this including identifying effective activities to teach self-compassion for emotional well-beingCitation21 or building supportive interpersonal relationships.Citation23 These were suggested as potential areas for future research and interdisciplinary collaboration. The finding that making and discussing art in a group setting may provide some individuals with chronic pain a sense of community, which in turn provided a social form of pain management, points to the potential for future research and interventions to incorporate the power of group connection in their designs.Citation22, Citation24, Citation26, Citation31

To produce rich detailed findings that captured the experience of persons with chronic pain, most articles in this review utilized multiple forms of data, designed multi-phased protocols, or modified well-established qualitative methods to suit participants better. To develop the field of arts-based research in chronic pain, future research will likely demand creative multi-phased studies that employ collaboration across disciplines. For instance, Kattari & BeltránCitation24 recommended a modified photovoice method to enhance participation for individuals with disabilities who are unable to move around; however, they combined this method with other art modalities, reflective journaling, and a public reception, challenging researchers who might seek to attribute the positive outcomes to isolated or specific aspects of the method. It is likely this creative or layered approach to research in chronic pain will continue to build on these innovative methods.

Pain drawings were employed in many of the included articles and future research with pain images holds promise for clinical interventions that use rescripting instructions to assist patients in generating and rehearsing more positive ways of coping with pain beyond negative representations of the self.Citation28 While articles provided evidence of the usefulness of pain drawings to capture inner experience, future pain image interventions may move beyond patient assessment to interventions for controlling pain.Citation28 Research that examines a person’s trajectory over time and how they come to manage their pain and develop a degree of agency and control in their life was also recommended.Citation27 Similarly, knowledge translation research that makes use of digital art and narrative-based tools, which participants prefer over traditional text and verbal-based health information, was highlighted in reviewed articles.Citation29

Discussion

Researchers employing arts-based research to study chronic pain unanimously commended these methods to better understand and communicate with patients. Articles ranged in sample size from 1 to 54 but favoured small sample sizes and rich in-depth data collection over larger samples that constrained methods of data collection. Various arts-based modalities were employed to better understand the lived experience of individuals with chronic pain, including drawing, painting, body mapping, photovoice, and some combined with traditional qualitative methods of interviews and focus groups. Across articles, authors used these arts-based modalities to capture and convey subtleties and layers of the patient experience that they claimed traditional methods alone were unable to capture. Several of the articles suggest that arts-based research may be used as a tool to help patients express the full breadth of their pain experience outside of a clinical setting. BagnoliCitation33 previously suggests that applying arts-based methods in the context of an interview can open participants up to different interpretations of the research question and allow for creative interviewing techniques that are more in line with the participant’s subjective meaning of the research question. Thus, combining art with traditional methods of data collection may open up a whole new world of possibility. However, no article directly compared the data collected from arts-based methods with the data collected through traditional methods; they were instead used as complementary approaches. Despite the wide variation in sample and methods across these articles, all authors identified arts-based research as suitable for exploring and understanding chronic pain from the perspective of the patient, aligning with findings in the use of arts-based research in other disease contexts.Citation10

We noted that eight articles treated art itself as data that were analyzed by the researchers. In most cases, artwork appeared to be treated akin to textual data that were interpreted often in conjunction with participants’ interviews, journals, or reflexive accounts. For example, Kirkham et al.,Citation25 grounded the analysis of images in participants’ accounts of their pictures out of recognition that images could be open to multiple interpretations, in what they called a triple hermeneutic, whereby the researcher made sense of the participant’s interpretation of their visual representation. Noting the dearth of direction for visual analysis, SkopCitation30 developed a multilayered coding scheme for analyzing body maps that used an inductive approach to developing and applying a coding scheme based on similarities and differences in the use of colour, themes and discourses, types of representation, size, repetition, and location. Across articles, there seemed to be a lack of established methods for analyzing and interpreting art when it was treated as data. Although researcher interpretation is fundamental in qualitative studies and appears integral to arts-based research, systematic methods for analyzing artwork and facilitating interpretation seem to be in their early stages. Further development is necessary for the field to progress.

Authors of nine articles reported that the arts-based research methods they employed produced therapeutic benefits for participants, as reported in other conditions.Citation10 Some papers described benefits for the individual in how they conceptualized their own pain experience,Citation22, Citation25−27 while others concluded that their arts-based research design constructed a collective space for participants to connect and share their experience with others.Citation24, Citation30, Citation31 These conclusions were derived from both study or project participants’ remarks and researchers’ observations and interpretations. Further investigation is necessary to gather explicit evidence exploring the varying effects of engagement in arts-based research. While certain individuals may experience positive outcomes, this may not be universally applicable to everyone. Moreover, exploration of the overlap, including similarities and differences, between art therapy and arts-based research, could provide insight into the therapeutic mechanisms that appear to be triggered through this type of research.

Research participation is typically conveyed as an activity that will benefit others without consideration for the benefit to the participant themselves. Yet, the psychological benefits of research participation have included increased self-esteem,Citation34 self-awareness, sense of purpose, empowerment, healing, and providing a voice to those who would otherwise be silenced.Citation35 Specifically, qualitative research interviews have been increasingly recognized as having potentially therapeutic benefits,Citation36−42 blurring the boundaries with therapy or counselling.Citation37 As recommended when conducting qualitative interviews, those using arts-based research methods should be aware of the possibility of blurring the researcher-therapist boundaries and develop research protocols accordingly. Warr et al.,Citation44 cautions against the use of arts-based research methods, stating that they can create ‘fuzzy boundaries’ between the researchers and the participants if emotional connections are formed over long periods of time. There may also be a tendency toward selection bias where people who may be more likely to benefit from arts-based research may also be more likely to participate in arts-based research projects. However, this might not always be the case. If arts-based research has the potential to bring difficult memories and emotions to the fore, researchers are obligated to make potential participants aware of this risk. Moreover, identification of the therapeutic elements of arts-based methods that use a group format warrants future investigation, as does the development of strategies to ensure study participants are supported in a safe and ethical manner. Ensuring researchers have processes in place for referring participants to counsellors or therapists seems like an important aspect to conducting arts-based research.

Ethically, many considerations need to be made when pursuing an arts-based research project that may differ from considerations in traditional methods. For instance, consent may need to be sought at multiple time points throughout the study to ensure ongoing consent as the product unfolds, in particular, where visual methods are used that may threaten the confidentiality of participants or others portrayed in the images.Citation43 Unlike interviews, focus groups, or surveys, arts-based research complicates questions of authorship and ownership of the work.Citation44, Citation45, Citation46, Citation47 Sustaining respectful relationships with participants may mean that ownership of the product remains with the research participant rather than the traditional approach of researcher ownership over the data.Citation44, Citation45, Citation46, Citation47

Conceptualizations of chronic pain point to the multidimensional nature of, and interactions among, biological, psychological, and social factors.Citation6 The findings of reviewed articles overwhelmingly underscored and illustrated the interconnected and reciprocal relationships between physical pain, psychological consequences and contributors to pain, and the significant role played by interpersonal relationships, community engagement, and social structures. Additionally, functional factors were highlighted, such as how pain shapes and is shaped by daily living and participation in everyday life. Recently, machine learning and predictive modelling have suggested the crucial contribution of emotion, particularly emotional experience felt in the body, in comprehending chronic pain.Citation48 Across articles, a marked impact of chronic pain on self-identity and self-awareness was also observed. The research further highlighted the biographical work undertaken by participants over time to redefine themselves and self-in relation to others. Moreover, the dynamic nature of chronic pain emerged as a central theme, with descriptions portraying it as a journey, a transition, evolving over time, and involving aspects of self-management, resistance, and resilience. These findings suggest potential shortcomings of clinical care that fail to account for and sufficiently address the psychosocial, functional, cognitive, and dynamic aspects of chronic pain experiences.

Arts-based research challenges the largely sole dependence on measures to understand painful experiences. On their own, visual analogue scales may be insufficient because they rely on constricting concepts that convey pain as only a simple rate of severity or intensity rather than a fluid and complex construct.Citation26 The reviewed articles proposed that further research should focus on the complexity of chronic pain conveyed through arts-based understandings and consider pain to be a complex social construct. Excessive reliance on biomedical mechanisms to explain pain overlooks the important understanding of pain as embedded within a social world shaped by relationships, perceptions, communities, and culture. It could be possible that various art modalities are differently suited to exploring pain embedded in social life, shaped by context in multiple ways. There is a need for future arts-based research to investigate how art modalities variously open up the complexity of understanding.

The implications of using arts-based modalities clinically warrant further study, given several authors’ recommendations for using artistic modalities to improve patient-provider communication. Reviewed articles indicated that these modalities facilitate a deeper understanding of patients’ experiences, particularly concerning social and structural factors within healthcare contexts.Citation30 This nuanced comprehension of chronic pain experiences holds potential for improving pain management, fostering stronger patient-provider relationships, and guiding the development of future interventions aimed at enhancing patient care.Citation24,Citation30,Citation32 Notably, several articles highlight the power of arts-based modalities in crafting interventions.Citation4,Citation26,Citation31 For instance, Lou et al.Citation26 found that engaging in art-making activities and maintaining a pain diary empowered patients to articulate their experience, better manage pain, and foster self-growth. Consequently, there is a need for clinical research to delve into the impact of art-making activities on pain coping and management and patient-provider dynamics. Additionally, authors suggested that arts-based research methods offer promise in refining or validating clinical tools for individuals with chronic pain.Citation20,Citation21,Citation27,Citation28 Pain drawings were highlighted as a valuable tool for conveying information beyond verbal descriptions, showing promise as a clinical aid.Citation20,Citation27,Citation28 Further, these methods offer insights into changes in patients’ pain trajectories and clinical progress over time,Citation27 highlighting their utility in monitoring and understanding the patient experience.

Finally, the articles reviewed proposed multi-modal, cross-disciplinary approaches to data collection to be incorporated into future arts-based research to gain better information on the complexity of the pain experience. The combination of traditional qualitative and quantitative data collection in research has been well-evaluated for its benefits and challenges. Arts-based research as a legitimate form of research inquiry has had less attention but holds promise as a methodology, particularly in the field of chronic pain.

Strengths and Limitations

This scoping review adds to the evidence base, providing an overview of literature available on arts-based research on chronic non-cancer pain. A strength of our review was the application of a specific definition of chronic non-cancer pain. By using a broad, yet consistent definition we were able to bring together work on fibromyalgia, complex chronic pain cases, neck pain, paraplegia-related pain, chronic pain in individuals with co-morbid disabilities, and pediatric chronic pain. This enabled us to explore the use of arts-based research across different health conditions and populations. The international spectrum of articles included was both a strength and limitation of this review. While including articles from Canada, the UK, New Zealand, USA enabled us to observe the diversity of the field, cultural differences in pain, disability, and healthcare systems were not assessed. This was further compounded by limiting our search results to English language publications which restricted our results to mainly English-speaking countries. For this review, publication database searches were limited to peer-reviewed sources. By excluding grey literature, discussion papers, other reviews, chronic cancer-related pain articles, and articles investigating art as therapy or arts-based treatments for chronic pain, we perhaps missed meaningful work that could be used to further understand and explore the role of arts-based research in chronic pain. Though our interest in arts-based research as a process and product stems from our close collaboration with patient partners, patient partners were not review team members owing to the lack of funding to provide adequate honoraria. Similarly, we did not conduct the optional final consultation phase of a scoping review because we did not have funding to organize and conduct robust engagement with patient, clinician, and researcher stakeholders, or to collect and analyze stakeholder input regarding preliminary review findings.

Future Research Directions

Findings from this scoping review suggest that the arts may have an important role in comprehensive approaches to understanding and helping people live with chronic pain. However, additional research and funding to support that research are needed to address gaps in the evidence. Interestingly, articles from physician researchers were few in this field, with the majority of the articles reporting on work being done in the fields of social work, psychology, and occupational therapy. Future research could explore how to bridge this gap between clinical medicine and arts-based research. It was unexpected to find that no articles explicitly mentioned individuals with chronic pain as co-researchers or research team members. Given the growing recognition of the value of engaging with patient partners throughout research, the development of guidance and support for patient partners and researchers, and mechanisms to reimburse and formally acknowledge patient partners as key research team members, there is a tremendous opportunity to reconceptualize arts-based research in collaboration with individuals experiencing chronic pain. By prioritizing patient-oriented approaches in future arts-based research, there is potential to inspire methodological innovation and uncover insights that directly address patients’ priorities. Interestingly, no articles indicated the use of digital storytelling, a technology-assisted form of arts-based research used to gather deeply personal stories. Future research should consider the use of digital storytelling and its feasibility as a new medium for arts-based research. While conducting this scoping review, we noted that articles predominantly recruited women more than other genders; therefore, it is unknown how gender might influence, for example, the types of visuals or the effectiveness of journaling or pain diaries in research designs. Future research may consider a sex and gender-based analysis into arts-based chronic pain research.

Conclusion

This scoping review explored the extent of arts-based media in chronic pain research and sought to understand the rationale behind the use of arts-based research methods. Despite the wide variation in sample and methods across these articles, researchers in this emergent field of inquiry and approach to studying chronic pain unanimously supported the use of arts-based research to better understand and communicate with patients.

Declaration of Interest Statements

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Additional information

Funding

A.F.H held a Michael Smith Health Research British Columbia Scholar Award when this research was completed.

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