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    <Identifier>26isfam051</Identifier>
    <IdentifierDoi>10.3205/26isfam051</IdentifierDoi>
    <IdentifierUrn>urn:nbn:de:0183-26isfam0516</IdentifierUrn>
    <ArticleType>Meeting Abstract</ArticleType>
    <TitleGroup>
      <Title language="en">Improvisation as a Healing Art</Title>
    </TitleGroup>
    <CreatorList>
      <Creator>
        <PersonNames>
          <Lastname>Heimann</Lastname>
          <LastnameHeading>Heimann</LastnameHeading>
          <Firstname>Christopher</Firstname>
          <Initials>C</Initials>
        </PersonNames>
        <Address>
          <Affiliation>Former Improvisation Lead, Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, London</Affiliation>
        </Address>
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          <Corporatename>German Medical Science GMS Publishing House</Corporatename>
        </Corporation>
        <Address>D&#252;sseldorf</Address>
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    <SubjectGroup>
      <SubjectheadingDDB>610</SubjectheadingDDB>
    </SubjectGroup>
    <DatePublishedList>
      <DatePublished>20260612</DatePublished>
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    <Language>engl</Language>
    <License license-type="open-access" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">
      <AltText language="en">This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.</AltText>
      <AltText language="de">Dieser Artikel ist ein Open-Access-Artikel und steht unter den Lizenzbedingungen der Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (Namensnennung).</AltText>
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      <Meeting>
        <MeetingId>M0652</MeetingId>
        <MeetingSequence>051</MeetingSequence>
        <MeetingCorporation>International Society for Arts and Medicine</MeetingCorporation>
        <MeetingName>The Healing Arts &#8211; Forging Alliances of Arts &#38; Medicine</MeetingName>
        <MeetingTitle></MeetingTitle>
        <MeetingSession>Presentation Abstracts</MeetingSession>
        <MeetingCity>Berlin</MeetingCity>
        <MeetingDate>
          <DateFrom>20260618</DateFrom>
          <DateTo>20260620</DateTo>
        </MeetingDate>
      </Meeting>
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    <ArticleNo>26isfam051</ArticleNo>
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      <MainHeadline>Text</MainHeadline><Pgraph><Mark1>Background:</Mark1> Theatre improvisation offers a unique mode of embodied inquiry, where creative practice becomes a site of knowledge about being, well-being, and healing. Drawing on 25 years of applied improvisation in arts training, leadership development, elite sport, and mental health, this work builds on the premise that authentic impulses &#8211; when expressed and explored &#8211; support self-esteem and psychological integration.</Pgraph><Pgraph><Mark1>Objectives:</Mark1> This session aims to demonstrate how improvisation can function beyond performance as a therapeutic and developmental modality. It seeks to show how embodied, psycho-physical practices generate insight, strengthen personal leadership, and nurture mental health, aligning with the congress theme of Embodied Research and practice-based knowledge production.</Pgraph><Pgraph><Mark1>Methods:</Mark1> An interactive workshop-lecture format integrates conceptual input with experiential exercises. Participants engage in improvisational methods drawn from Keith Johnstone, Michael Chekhov, Augusto Boal, and Dr. Heimann&#8217;s improvisation curriculum at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (which he led from 2005&#8211;2024) and his doctoral dissertation The Promise &#8211; Searching for the Creative Moment in Theatre, Business and Life.</Pgraph><Pgraph><Mark1>Results:</Mark1> Observations across domains &#8211; organisational leadership, elite sport (FC Bayern Munich), clinical settings (Maudsley Hospital) and systemic therapy training (Tavistock Centre) suggest that improvisation fosters psychological flexibility, embodied presence, relational attunement, and resilience. Participants commonly report increased self-awareness, enhanced capacity to navigate uncertainty, and greater connection to authentic impulses.</Pgraph><Pgraph><Mark1>Conclusion:</Mark1> Improvisation constitutes a powerful healing art and embodied research. By engaging creative spontaneity as a pathway to knowledge, participants gain practical tools to support well-being, personal growth, and therapeutic insight-demonstrating improvisation&#8217;s relevance within arts-medicine alliances.</Pgraph></TextBlock>
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