Design Better

Daisy Fancourt: Epidemiologist on how creativity rewrites your biology and extends your lifespan

14 snips
Mar 12, 2026
Daisy Fancourt, a UCL professor who studies how arts shape health, argues arts belong alongside sleep and exercise. She discusses arts changing gene expression, slowing biological aging, and stabilizing vital signs in the NICU. Topics include why creative work can heal yet also risk burnout, how different art forms target different health goals, and practical daily habits to boost the benefits.
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ANECDOTE

Singing Stabilized My Premature Daughter In The NICU

  • Daisy Fancourt witnessed singing calm her newborn daughter Daphne in the NICU, with observable rises in oxygen saturation on monitors.
  • That real-time change convinced her of arts' physiological impact and inspired storytelling alongside scientific evidence in her book.
INSIGHT

Arts Trigger Deep Biological Changes

  • Arts engagement activates reward networks (dopaminergic mesolimbic system) and down-regulates the autonomic stress response, lowering heart rate and blood pressure.
  • Studies show reduced stress hormones, inflammation, improved brain connectivity, and slower epigenetic aging from regular arts activity.
INSIGHT

Arts As The Fifth Pillar Of Health

  • Fancourt argues arts should be a fifth pillar of health alongside sleep, diet, activity, and nature due to mounting rigorous evidence.
  • She predicts a 'seatbelt moment' where arts engagement becomes broadly recognized as fundamental to health.
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