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Friday, March 22, 2013

Music Therapy


Music Therapy
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Description
Music therapy is the use of music by health care
professionals to promote healing and enhance quality of
life for their patients. Music therapy may be used to
encourage emotional expression, promote social
interaction, relieve symptoms, and for other purposes.
Music therapists may use active or passive methods
with patients, depending on the individual patient’s
needs and abilities.
Overview
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There is some evidence that, when used with
conventional treatment, music therapy can help to
reduce pain and relieve chemotherapy-induced nausea
and vomiting. It may also relieve stress and provide an
overall sense of well-being. Some studies have found
that music therapy can lower heart rate, blood
pressure, and breathing rate.
How is it promoted for use?
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Music therapists work with a variety of physical,
emotional, and psychological symptoms. Music therapy
is often used in cancer treatment to help reduce pain,
anxiety, and nausea caused by chemotherapy. Some
people believe music therapy may be a beneficial
addition to the health care of children with cancer by
promoting social interaction and cooperation.
There is evidence that music therapy can reduce high
blood pressure, rapid heart beat, depression, and
sleeplessness. There are no claims music therapy can
cure cancer or other diseases, but medical experts do
believe it can reduce some symptoms, aid healing,
improve physical movement, and enrich a patient’s
quality of life.
What does it involve?
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Music therapists design music sessions for individuals
and groups based on their needs and tastes. Some
aspects of music therapy include making music,
listening to music, writing songs, and talking about
lyrics. Music therapy may also involve imagery and
learning through music. It can be done in different
places such as hospitals, cancer centers, hospices, at
home, or anywhere people can benefit from its calming
or stimulating effects. The patient does not need to
have any musical ability to benefit from music therapy.
A related practice called music thanatology is
sometimes used at the end of a patient’s life to ease the
person’s passing. It is practiced in homes, hospices, or
nursing homes.
What is the history behind it?
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Music has been used in medicine for thousands of
years. Ancient Greek philosophers believed that music
could heal both the body and the soul. Native Americans have used
singing and chanting as part of their healing rituals for millennia.
The more formal approach to music therapy began in World War
II, when U.S. Veterans Administration hospitals began to use
music
to help treat soldiers suffering from shell shock. In 1944, Michigan
State University established the first music therapy degree program
in the world.
Today, more than seventy colleges and universities have degree
programs that are approved by the American Music Therapy
Association. Music therapists must have at least a bachelor’s
degree, 1,200 hours of clinical training, and one or more
internships before they can be certified. There are thousands of
professional music therapists working in health care settings in the
United States today. They serve as part of cancer-management
teams in many hospitals and cancer centers, helping to plan and
evaluate treatment. Some music therapy services are covered by
health insurance.
What is the evidence?
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Scientific studies have shown the value of music therapy on the
body, mind, and spirit of children and adults. Researchers have
found that music therapy, when used with anti-nausea drugs for
patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy, can help ease nausea
and vomiting. A number of clinical trials have shown the benefit of
music therapy for short-term pain, including pain from cancer.
Some studies have suggested that music may help decrease the
overall intensity of the patient’s experience of pain when used with
pain-relieving drugs. Music therapy can also result in a decreased
need for pain medicine in some patients, although studies on this
topic have shown mixed results.
In hospice patients, one study found that music therapy improved
comfort, relaxation, and pain control. Another study found that
quality of life improved in cancer patients who received music
therapy, even as it declined in those who did not. No differences
were seen in survival between the 2 groups.
A more recent clinical trial looked at the effects of music during
the course of several weeks of radiation treatments. The
researchers found that while emotional distress (such as anxiety)
seemed to be helped at the beginning of treatment, the patients
reported that this effect gradually decreased. Music did not appear
to help such symptoms as pain, fatigue, and depression over the
long term.
Other clinical trials have revealed a reduction in heart rate, blood
pressure, breathing rate, insomnia, depression, and anxiety with
music therapy. No one knows all the ways music can benefit the
body, but studies have shown that music can affect brain waves,
brain circulation, and stress hormones. These effects are usually
seen during and shortly after the music therapy.
Studies have shown that students who take music lessons have
improved IQ levels, and show improvement in nonmusical abilities
as well. Other studies have shown that listening to music composed
by Mozart produces a short-term improvement in tasks that use
spatial abilities. Studies of brain circulation have shown that
people listening to Mozart have more activity in certain areas of
the brain. This has been called the “Mozart effect.” Although the
reasons for this effect are not completely clear, this kind of
information supports the idea that music can be used in many
helpful ways.
Some clinical trials that involve listening to music have shown no
benefit on anxiety during surgical procedures, although one study
that allowed patients to choose their own music showed improved
anxiety levels. One recent review of studies looked at the effect of
music on all types of pain and found a wide variation in its effects.
The study authors observed that the best effects were on short-term
pain after surgery. It is important to note that not all studies of
music use music therapists, who assess the patient’s needs,
circumstances, and preferences, as well as the different effects of
certain types of music. This may account for some differences in
clinical trial results.
Are there any possible problems or complications?
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In general, music therapy done under the care of a professionally
trained therapist has a helpful effect and is considered safe when
used with standard treatment. Musical intervention by untrained
people can be ineffective or can even cause increased stress and
discomfort. Relying on this type of treatment alone and avoiding or
delaying conventional medical care for cancer may have serious
health consequences.
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