Music Therapy: Other Common Name(s) : None Scientific/medical Name(s) : None
Music Therapy: Other Common Name(s) : None Scientific/medical Name(s) : None
Music Therapy: Other Common Name(s) : None Scientific/medical Name(s) : None
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 patients needs and abilities.
Overview
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.
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 bachelors 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.
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.
Additional resources
More information from your American Cancer Society
The following information on complementary and alternative therapies may also be helpful to you. These
materials may be found on our Web site (www.cancer.org) or ordered from our toll-free number (1-800-ACS2345).
Guidelines for Using Complementary and Alternative Therapies
Dietary Supplements: How to Know What Is Safe
The ACS Operational Statement on Complementary and Alternative Methods of Cancer Management
Complementary and Alternative Methods for Cancer Management
Placebo Effect
Learning About New Ways to Treat Cancer
Learning About New Ways to Prevent Cancer
References
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What is music therapy? American Music Therapy Association Web site. Accessed at www.musictherapy.org/
on May 23, 2008.
Note: This information may not cover all possible claims, uses, actions, precautions, side effects or
interactions. It is not intended as medical advice, and should not be relied upon as a substitute for
consultation with your doctor, who is familiar with your medical situation.
universality
providing a relaxed environment can enable better social interactions with others
listening
self-management of behaviour
Music is a core function in our brain. Our brain is primed early on to respond to and
process music. Research has shown that day-old infants are able to detect differences in
rhythmic patterns. Mothers across cultures and throughout time have used lullabies and
rhythmic rocking to calm crying babies. From an evolutionary standpoint, music precedes
language. We dont yet know why, but our brains are wired to respond to music, even though
its not essential for our survival.
2.
Our bodies entrain to rhythm. Have you ever walked down the street, humming a song in
your head, and noticed that your walking to the beat? Thats called entrainment. Our motor
systems naturally entrain, or match, to a rhythmic beat. When a musical input enters our
central nervous system via the auditory nerve, most of the input goes to the brain for
processing. But some of it heads straight to motor nerves in our spinal cord. This allows our
muscles to move to the rhythm without our having to think about it or try. Its how we dance to
music, tap our foot to a rhythm, and walk in time to a beat. This is also why music therapists
can help a person whos had a stroke re-learn how to walk and develop strength and
endurance in their upper bodies.
3.
We have physiologic responses to music. Every time your breathing quickens, your heartrate increases, or you feel a shiver down your spine, thats your body responding
physiologically to music. Qualified music therapists can use this to help stimulate a person in a
coma or use music to effectively help someone relax.
4.
Children (even infants) respond readily to music. Any parent knows that its natural for a
child to begin dancing and singing at an early age. My kids both started rocking to music
before they turned one. And have you seen the YouTube video of the baby dancing to
Beyonce? Children learn through music, art, and play, so its important (even necessary) to
use those mediums when working with children in therapy.
5.
Music taps into our emotions. Have you ever listened to a piece of music and smiled? Or
felt sad? Whether from the music itself, or from our associations with the music, music taps
into our emotional systems. Many people use this in a therapeutic way, listening to certain
music that makes them feel a certain way. The ability for music to easily access our emotions
is very beneficial for music therapists.
6.
Music helps improve our attention skills. I was once working with a 4-year-old in the
hospital. Her 10-month-old twin sisters were visiting, playing with Grandma on the bed. As
soon as I started singing to the older sister, the twins stopped playing and stared at me, for a
full 3 minutes. Even from an early age, music can grab and hold our attention. This allows
music therapists to target attention and impulse control goals, both basic skills we need to
function and succeed.
7.
Music uses shared neural circuits as speech. This is almost a no-brainer (no pun
intended), but listening to or singing music with lyrics uses shared neural circuits as listening
to and expressing speech. Music therapists can use this ability to help a child learn to
communicate or help someone whos had a stroke re-learn how to talk again.
8.
Music enhances learning. Do you remember how you learned your ABCs? Through a song!
The inherent structure and emotional pull of music makes it an easy tool for teaching
concepts, ideas, and information. Music is an effective mnemonic device and can tag
information, not only making it easy to learn, but also easy to later recall.
9.
Music taps into our memories. Have you ever been driving, heard a song on the radio, then
immediately been taken to a certain place, a specific time in your life, or a particular person?
Music is second only to smell for its ability to stimulate our memory in a very powerful way.
Music therapists who work with older adults with dementia have countless stories of how
music stimulates their clients to reminisce about their life.
10. Music is a social experience. Our ancestors bonded and passed on their stories and
knowledge through song, stories, and dance. Even today, many of our music experiences are
shared with a group, whether playing in band or an elementary music class, listening to jazz at
a restaurant, or singing in church choir. Music makes it easy for music therapists to structure
and facilitate a group process.
11. Music is predictable, structured, and organizedand our brain likes it! Music often has a
predictable steady beat, organized phrases, and a structured form. If you think of most
country/folk/pop/rock songs you know, theyre often organized with a verse-chorus structure.
Theyre organized in a way that we like and enjoy listening to over and over again. Even sound
waves that make up a single tone or an entire chord are organized in mathematical ratiosand
our brains really like this predictability and structure.
12. Music is non-invasive, safe and motivating. We cant forget that most people really enjoy
music. This is not the most important reason why music works in therapy, but its the icing on
the cake.