Policy Brief: Creative Aging in the Healthy Aging Ecosystem

Advancing Brain Health, Social Connectedness, and Livable Communities

Executive Summary

Creative engagement through the arts is fundamental to the human experience and deeply linked to enhanced health and well-being. Specifically older adults serve as unique and essential cultural contributors across all art forms, enriching their communities and gaining first-hand benefit from active arts participation. Building on a wealth of health promotion research, creative aging is the practice of intentional artistic and creative engagement throughout our lives—advancing vital ways to help restore and maximize health and functional ability regardless of one’s age, health status, or perceived capabilities. While creative aging is a growing field in the community and health care landscape, commonly held barrier mindsets often distort the value of both the arts and older adults—limiting awareness and subsequent investment. 

The much-anticipated growth and variation of America’s older adult population is being coupled with a wide-ranging policy and care delivery response at federal, state, and local levels. As public and private sector leaders redesign services for today’s and tomorrow’s older adults, three trending issues shape the healthy aging agenda: brain health, social connectedness, and livable communities. Across these three issues and where they converge, creative aging contributes distinctive and valuable strategies that support holistic healthy aging for individuals, communities, and society.

This policy brief makes the case to incorporate creative aging more intentionally into the healthy aging ecosystem through three recommendations.

A white doodle icon of a paint palette and brush with stars around them.
Icon of three figures cheering with the middle figure holding a flag.

Introduction

Art is the signature of civilizations.”
Beverly Sills

Creativity and its expression in art, music, literature, and other culture-making activities are central to the human experience.  Past societies mark their existence through original, often hand-made artifacts. Futurists imagine ways that creativity will grow into methods and applications beyond current reach. Creative expression allows people across all life stages to explore and manifest their inner worlds into tangible outer substance that give meaning to daily life and can be shared with others.

In the modern era, the ability to freely enjoy the arts and participate in cultural life is considered a fundamental human right (United Nations, 1948).  The wisdom of this decades-old declaration is validated by the contribution of creative engagement to enhanced health, regardless of a person’s age or ability.  For example, intentional creative engagement can nurture brain and body development, bolster mental resilience, grow social connectivity, foster well-being, and support physical and emotional healing and wellness (Bone et al., 2023; Chorna et al., 2019; Fancourt & Finn, 2019; Fluharty et al., 2021, Jensen et al., 2024; Kaimal et. al., 2016; Stickley et al., 2018).  

When older adults get involved in creative engagement, they often benefit from key aspects that define healthy aging.  Examples include lower rates of depression, improved cognitive reserve, higher quality sleep, protection against age-related cognitive decline, heightened defense against psychological distress, fewer falls, and decreased health expenditures (Bone, et al., 2024; Bone, et. al., 2022; Cohen et al., 2006; Fioranelli et al., 2023; Galassi et al., 2022; Strong et al., 2018).  Through the power of creative engagement to support measurable improvements in physical, mental, and social well-being among older adults, the concept of creative aging was born. Creative aging is the practice of intentional artistic and creative engagement throughout our lives to support our health, connection, and purpose as we age. It recognizes that creativity is lifelong—and that older adults are essential cultural contributors across all art forms, skill levels, and communities (Lifetime Arts, 2025). Creative aging practices advance vital ways to help restore and maximize health and functional ability regardless of one’s age, health status, or perceived capabilities.  

As a growing field, creative aging efforts are blooming in diverse spaces such as intergenerational programs, senior centers, museums, libraries, independent and assisted living residences, and universities to name a few. Community coalitions are forming, informational hubs are connecting older adults with local arts programs, and state-based cultural agencies are dedicating staff time and funding to help creative aging take hold in cities and counties. Additionally, health systems and insurance companies are getting involved by leading “arts on prescription” programs, offering a way for care providers to recommend arts, culture, and nature activities as part of a patient’s recovery regimen (Generations, 2025; Golden et al., 2023; Sonke et al., 2023). 

Even with this momentum, two barrier mindsets frequently limit the adoption of creative aging. The first is a false idea that arts participation is a luxury and should be accessible only when extra money is available—rather than recognizing the arts as a necessary form of human communication that fosters a sense of purpose and meaning-making while contributing to self-identity and place in culture. The second is that older adults have no interest and/or capacity for active engagement with new artforms, particularly those living with chronic conditions and functional decline. Often generated from ageism and ableism, this inaccurate perception ignores the creativity inherent in every person and the power of arts to ignite its expression.

Now is the time for individuals, communities, and societies to break free from these barrier mindsets and fully embrace the link between creative aging and healthy aging.

  1. Full recognition that creative aging is integral to healthy aging by cross-sector local, state, and federal leaders.
  2. Inclusion of creative aging in federal, state, and local level public policy and implementation efforts that are centered on healthy aging. 
  3. Diffusion of and investment in creative aging across health-and aging-focused service landscapes.
The only way to deal with this life meaningfully is to find one’s passion.”
Maya Angelou

What Are the Arts?

While no singular definition exists, this brief conceptualizes “the arts” as generally inhabiting these five categories with illustrative examples:

  • Visual Arts, such as painting, photography, sculpture, street art, textiles, and woodwork.
  • Performing Arts, such as music, dance, film, singing, spoken word, and theatre.
  • Literary Arts, such as writing, reading, language arts, and attending literary festivals.
  • Digital and Electronic Arts, such as animations, podcasting, and computer graphics.
  • Cultural Arts, such as engaged attendance at museums, art exhibitions, concerts, theatre, cultural festivals, spiritual events, culinary arts, and gardening.

Similarly, arts participation focuses on the various forms and modes of creative engagement (Sonke et al, 2024).

  • Forms or disciplines, such as crafts, dance, design, music, performance, and visual arts.
  • Modes include the ways in which people engage including formal, informal, live, virtual, individual, and group participation.
A teaching artist helps an older woman with shading techniques.
Visual arts program at Waterloo Public Library in Waterloo, NE.

What is Creative Aging?

Creative aging is the practice of intentional artistic and creative engagement throughout our lives to support our health, connection, and purpose as we age. It recognizes that creativity is lifelong—and that older adults are essential cultural contributors across all art forms, skill levels, and communities (Lifetime Arts, 2025). 

Music in the soul can be heard by the universe.”
Lao Tzu

Population, Policy, and Issue Context for Creative Aging

Multiple system-level factors may facilitate the widespread adoption of creative aging into the healthy aging ecosystem. These include current patterns of population aging, key service and policy drivers at the federal and state levels, and the intersection with three trending issues in healthy aging: brain health, social connectedness, and livable communities.

Policy Recommendations

A song is not a song until you sing it.”
Oscar Hammerstein

The older adult population of today and tomorrow, along with the policy and service landscape that supports it, is approaching a new frontier that will impact the healthy aging policy agenda in a variety of ways. Creative aging has an essential role to maximize the visibility, values, and successes of arts, music, and culture-making efforts that complement healthy aging goals for individuals, communities, and the larger society.

Below are three policy recommendations with objectives geared to amplify and incorporate creative aging in the healthy aging ecosystem so that it is a shaping force for public consciousness, multisector policy decisions, and community-level action.

  • Objective 1A: Develop, test, and launch a multimodal, multi-stakeholder communications campaign that dissolves barrier mindsets and amplifies positioning of creative aging in healthy aging’s three trending issues.
  • Objective 1B: Develop model survey/polling language on creative aging with core components of healthy aging’s three trending issues and embed in national, state, and private sector population datasets and polling.

Embed creative aging principles and attributes in federal and state policy plans and implementation efforts that are centered on healthy aging with specific ties to brain health, social connectedness, and livable communities.

  • Objective 2A: Develop and disseminate model language on creative aging for states to incorporate into Multisector / Master Plans for Aging and implementation initiatives, Older Americans Act (OAA) State Plans on Aging, Medicaid waiver programs, and Medicare and Medicaid HMO regulations.
  • Objective 2B: Develop and disseminate core concepts of creative aging for the federal Department of Health and Human Services to incorporate into healthy aging-related plans and implementation initiatives.

Accelerate diffusion of and investment in creative aging efforts within health-and aging-focused service landscapes, particularly in the private sector, which seek improvements in brain health, social connectedness, and livable communities.

  • Objective 3A: Collaborate with health-and-aging-focused service providers to initiate scale and spread of current and emerging creative aging efforts with emphasis on healthy aging’s three trending issues.
  • Objective 3B: Partner with community foundations and donor-advised fund administrators to design and embed creative aging into healthy aging initiatives and cyclical funding processes with emphasis on the three trending issues.
He who works with his hands and his head and his heart is an artist.”
St. Francis of Assisi
A teaching artist stretches with two older women during a dance program.

About the Author

Gretchen Alkema, Ph.D. is president of Wolf Eagle Enterprises, LLC—a strategic engagement firm that delivers clear-eyed insights and resource-conscious solutions to health, aging, and care delivery industries.

Acknowledgements

This report was generously supported by The Music Man Foundation. We wholeheartedly thank our Policy Advisory Working Group who provided valuable perspective and feedback throughout the development of this brief.

Advisory Working Group: Liz Briscoe, Aging and Health Affinity Groups Coordinator, Maryland Philanthropy Network; Paige Cooke, M.S., Founder & Principal Healthcare Quality & Policy Consultant, APIQ Consulting, LLC; Rob Ence, Executive Director, Utah Commission on Aging; Dr. Jill Sonke, US Cultural Policy Fellow, Stanford University, University of Florida; Erin Westphal, Director of Policy, Programs, and Operations, The SCAN Foundation

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