Hong Kong Artist Joins Bupa Global Campaign Highlighting Powerful Link Between Creativity and Health
Hong Kong Artist Joins Bupa Global Campaign Highlighting Powerful Link Between Creativity and Health
Selasa, 19 Mei 2026 | 10:26
- New research commissioned by Bupa highlights how creative
activities like art can help people process and share health
experiences, with 85% agreeing creativity can support mental and
physical health
- The research coincides with Bupa's Express Your Health campaign
featuring health stories from creators and storytellers worldwide,
including Hong Kong artist Sophia Hotung
- Bupa is encouraging people to take 30 minutes to get creative and
express a health story. People in Hong Kong can also submit their
creations to join a growing global collection on Express Your Health
HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 19 May 2026 - New research commissioned by Bupa (a survey of 4,000
adults in the UK, Spain and Australia) found that while 85% recognised
that hobbies like drawing, doodling, painting or crafts can have a
positive impact on health and wellbeing, 55% of those who don't make
time for creative activities said they can't remember the last time they
did any (and among those who could remember, 35% said it was more than a
year ago). The survey points to a broader challenge many people face in
making time for creativity as part of overall wellbeing. Almost half
(47%) of people don't spend any time on creative activities, with around
a quarter quoting lack of time (24%), lack of inspiration (26%) and
tiredness after work (28%) as some of the biggest barriers.
As part of Bupa's Express Your Health campaign, the
hand-painted mural on London's Southbank brings together powerful health
stories expressed through art by more than 20 creators from around the
world.
The findings spotlight a strong yet often overlooked connection between creativity and health and coincide with the launch of
Express Your Health – Bupa's new campaign celebrating creativity
as a powerful way to share health experiences and encouraging people to
open up so they can feel less alone and empowered to seek care.
Contributors include Hong Kong-based digital artist Sophia Hotung, who
shares her story of autoimmune relapse and how art gave her a way to
express and make sense of her experiences with illness. Other creators
include Olympic diver Tom Daley, Paralympian Richard Whitehead and
Australian Football League player Cody Weightman. The mural represents
stories spanning fertility, sickle cell, diabetes, anxiety, ageing,
grief, and more, showing how art can express the physical, mental and
emotional sides of health.
Sophia Hotung, who created a piece of artwork for the campaign, said,"For
me, art is a way to express and understand my life experiences, which
include moments of disability, limitation, and illness. After autoimmune
relapses left me bedbound, I taught myself digital art, transforming
what was isolation and hopelessness into a creative practice on my own
terms. Digital art enables and empowers me to create, even when my body
is limited. Entering that flow state of creation allows me both to
escape and ground myself through stretches of joy and difficulty. I love
that this campaign facilitates authentic creative expression about and
through illness and I'm proud to work with Bupa to show others the
powerful and positive impact of art on wellness."
Global studies are increasingly showing that even short bursts of
creativity can benefit health. 30–45 minutes of activities like art,
regardless of skill, has been shown to reduce stress and anxiety, with
measurable drops in physiological markers of stress including the
hormone cortisol.[1] Other research shows art can support mental
wellbeing[2] and help people process life experiences and emotions[3].
Fiona Bosman, Group Brand Director, said, "This work highlights
something we see globally: when people are given the space to share
their health experiences, it can be transformative. Through this
campaign, we're encouraging people to express themselves creatively,
because when words are hard to find, creativity can help us process,
communicate and connect, and ultimately take greater control of our
health."
Bupa is inviting people around the world to share their health story
through creativity and be part of a growing global collection on the
campaign site
Express Your Health.
People in Hong Kong can also take part by submitting their own creative
expression to the online collection. Tips and prompts are available to
help people get started with a simple 30-minute creative activity.
***
The research was carried out by Opinium. 4,000 people were surveyed
online in the UK, Spain and Australia. Quotas were set to ensure
respondents were nationally representative of age (18+), gender and
region for each country. Fieldwork took place between 13-20 April 2026.
Notes to editors
Partner and contributor background information, supporting research
sources and the full list of campaign contributors are available on
request.