International Health Humanities Network Membership
Stephen Clift
Professor Stephen Clift, BA, PhD, FRSPH
Stephen Clift is Professor of Health Education in the Faculty of Health and Social Care, Canterbury Christ Church University, and Director of the Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts and Health. He is also Professorial Fellow of the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH) and has lead on developments within the Society related to creative arts and health. He has worked in the field of health promotion and public health for over twenty-five years, and has made contributions to research, practice and training on HIV/AIDS prevention, sex education, international travel and health and the health promoting school in Europe. His current interests relate to arts and heath and particularly the potential value of group singing for health and wellbeing.
The De Haan Research Centre was established in 2005 and since then has made original contributions to research on the value of singing for people with enduring mental health challenges and older people with chronic respiratory illness. The Centre has also conducted the first ever community based randomised controlled trial on the value of singing for older people, with funding from the National Institute for Health Research. Stephen is one of the founding editors of the journal Arts & Health: An international journal for research, policy and practice published by Taylor Francis. He is Chair of the recently established RSPH Special Interest Group for Arts, Health and Wellbeing. He is also co-editor with Professor Paul Camic of the Oxford Public Health Textbook on Creative Arts, Health and Wellbeing published in November 2015.
Recent research publications
Clift, S., Gilbert, R. & Vella-Burrows, T. (2016) A Choir in Every Care Home: A review of research on the value of singing for older people. Available from: https://achoirineverycarehome.files.wordpress.com/2016/04/wp6-research-review-v2-1.pdf
Clift, S., Manship, S. & Stephens, L. (2015) Singing for Mental Health and Wellbeing: Findings from West Kent and Medway, Canterbury: Canterbury Christ Church University. ISBN: 978-1-909067-51-6
Clift, S., Page, S., Daykin, N. & Peasgood, E. (2016) The perceived effects of singing on the health and
well-being of wives and partners of members of the British Armed Forces: a cross-sectional survey, Public Health, doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2016.03.022
Coulton, S., Clift, S., Skingley, A. and Rodriguez, J. (2015) Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of community singing on mental health-related quality of life of older people: randomised controlled trial, British Journal of Psychiatry, 206, 1–6. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.129908
Morrison, I., Clift, S., Page, S., Salisbury, I., Shipton, M., Skingley, A., Vella-Burrows, T., Coulton, S. and Treadwell, P. (2013) A UK feasibility study on the value of singing for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), UNESCO Journal, 3, 3. Available from: http://web.education.unimelb.edu.au/UNESCO/pdfs/ejournals/vol3iss3_2013/003_MORRISON_PAPER.pdf
Skingley, A., Bungay, H., Clift, S. & Warden, J. (2013) Experiences of being a control group: lessons from a UK based randomised controlled trial of group singing as a health promotion initiative for older people. Health Promotion International, doi: 10.1093/heapro/dat026.
Skingley, A., Martin, A. and Clift, S. (2015) The contribution of community singing groups to the well-being of older people: Participant perspectives from the United Kingdom, Journal of Applied Gerontology, 1-23, doi: 10.1177/0733464815577141