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Canadian doctors to start prescribing art museum visits for feel-good therapy

  • Pilot project will allow patients suffering physical and mental health issues to experience the benefits of art on health with free visits
  • More than 100 doctors have already signed up to take part

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A woman looks at Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot's ‘The Lady in Blue’ at the National Gallery of Art in Washington. Doctors in Canada are starting to prescribe visits to art museums as feel-good therapy. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

A group of Canadian doctors will begin prescribing trips to an art gallery to help patients suffering a range of ailments become a picture of health.

A partnership between the Francophone Association of Doctors in Canada (MFdC) and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA) will allow patients suffering from a number of physical and mental health issues, along with their loved ones, to take in the benefits of art on health with free visits.

The pilot project is unprecedented globally, according to its organiser.

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The project will see participating physicians prescribe up to 50 visits to the MMFA during treatment, each pass valid for up to two adults and two minors.

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So far 100 doctors have enrolled to take part over the course of a year, Nicole Parent, head of the MFdC, told AFP Thursday.

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