Art therapy and children with ADHD: a survey of art therapists
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Kaplan University
Abstract
Several studies suggest art therapy’s (AT) effectiveness with children diagnosed with ADHD.
Yet the specific AT techniques used, symptoms alleviated, and efficacy estimates are entirely
lacking in the literature. As such, a survey was developed for art therapists nationwide; 31
responded. Most respondents, 87%, had read a chapter or article about AT with ADHD; 68% had
attended conferences on this topic. Only 20% marketed to ADHD clients, but 91% had treated at
least one ADHD child, with 102 children treated on average per therapist. Most common AT
techniques for ADHD included painting, 93%; form drawing, 89%; collage, 81%; and sculpting,
78%. These 4 were also rated most valuable with ADHD. Many therapists had also used mask
making, oil pastels, tissue arts, and beadwork. Few had used fiber or digital arts. Therapists
differentiated which ADHD symptoms AT effectively treats. All believed AT effective with
attentional problems and follow through; most believed AT effective with avoidance of sustained
efforts, listening problems, organizational difficulties, distraction by extraneous stimuli, running
around/climbing, and carelessness; many believed AT effective with difficulty taking turns,
getting out of seat, restlessness, fidgeting, noisiness, talkativeness, and interrupting others. Few
found AT effective with blurting out answers/comments, forgetfulness, and misplacing things.
Overall, 81% rated AT effective with ADHD; 11%, reported AT effective enough to use without
medication, but most reported AT as effective adjunctively with medication. Since more art
therapists appear to use AT with ADHD than the sparse peer-reviewed literature suggests, further
research into AT’s efficacy with ADHD seems warranted.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Bartoe, H. L. (2014). Art therapy and children with ADHD: A survey of art therapists. Retrieved from ProQuest Digital Dissertations. (AAT 1571227)