Art as therapy: Swiss doctors prescribe museum visits
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Five hundred prescriptions will be handed out for free visits to three museums and the city’s botanical garden.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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NEUCHATEL, Switzerland – Swiss doctors are expanding the range of prescriptions for patients with mental health conditions and chronic illnesses to include strolls in public gardens, art galleries and museums.
The city of Neuchatel, in western Switzerland, launched the pilot project with doctors in February to help struggling residents and to promote physical activity.
“For people who sometimes have difficulties with their mental health, it allows them, for a moment, to forget their worries, their pain, their illnesses, to go and spend a joyful moment of discovery,” said Dr Patricia Lehmann, who is taking part in the programme.
“I’m convinced that when we take care of people’s emotions, we allow them, somehow, to perhaps find a path to healing.”
Five hundred prescriptions will be handed out for free visits to three museums and the city’s botanical garden.
One of them went to a 26-year-old woman suffering from burnout. She was at the Neuchatel Museum of Art and History, which has masterpieces by Claude Monet and Edgar Degas, as well as a collection of automated dolls.
“I think it brings a little light into the darkness,” she said, asking to remain anonymous.
The authorities say the idea came from a 2019 World Health Organisation study exploring the role of the arts in promoting health and dealing with illness.
During Covid-19 lockdowns, museum closures hit people’s well-being, said Ms Julie Courcier Delafontaine, head of the city’s culture department.
“That was a real trigger, and we were really convinced that culture is essential for the well-being of humanity,” she added.
The initiative will be tested for a year and could be expanded to other activities such as theatre.
“We’d love this project to take off and have enough patients to prove its worth, and that one day, why not, health insurance covers culture as a form of therapy,” said Ms Courcier Delafontaine. REUTERS

