fbpx
Wikipedia

Music therapy

Music therapy, an allied health profession, "is the clinical and evidence-based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a credentialed professional who has completed an approved music therapy program."[1] It is also a vocation, involving a deep commitment to music and the desire to use it as a medium to help others. Although music therapy has only been established as a profession relatively recently, the connection between music and therapy is not new.[2]

Music therapy
Power of Music by Louis Gallait. A brother and sister resting before an old tomb. The brother is attempting to comfort his sibling by playing the violin, and she has fallen into a deep sleep, "oblivious of all grief, mental and physical".
ICD-9-CM93.84
MeSHD009147
[edit on Wikidata]

Music therapy is a broad field. Music therapists use music-based experiences to address client needs in one or more domains of human functioning: cognitive, academic, emotional/psychological; behavioral; communication; social; physiological (sensory, motor, pain, neurological and other physical systems), spiritual, aesthetics.[3][4][5] Music experiences are strategically designed to use the elements of music for therapeutic effects, including melody, harmony, key, mode, meter, rhythm, pitch/range, duration, timbre, form, texture, and instrumentation.[6][7][8]

Some common music therapy practices include developmental work (communication, motor skills, etc.) with individuals with special needs, songwriting and listening in reminiscence, orientation work with the elderly, processing and relaxation work, and rhythmic entrainment for physical rehabilitation in stroke survivors. Music therapy is used in medical hospitals, cancer centers, schools, alcohol and drug recovery programs, psychiatric hospitals, nursing homes, and correctional facilities.[1]

Music therapy is distinctive from Musopathy, which relies on a more generic and non-cultural approach based on neural, physical, and other responses to the fundamental aspects of sound.[9]

Music therapy might also be described as Sound Healing. Extensive studies have been made with this description [10][11]

Music therapy aims to provide physical and mental benefit. Music therapists use their techniques to help their patients in many areas, ranging from stress relief before and after surgeries to neuropathologies such as Alzheimer's disease. Studies on patients diagnosed with mental health disorders such as anxiety, depression, and schizophrenia have associated some improvements in mental health after music therapy.[12] The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) have claimed that music therapy is an effective method in helping individuals experiencing mental health issues, and more should be done to offer those in need this type of help.[13]

Uses

Children and adolescents

Music therapy may be suggested for adolescent populations to help manage disorders usually diagnosed in adolescence, such as mood/anxiety disorders and eating disorders, or inappropriate behaviors, including suicide attempts, withdrawal from family, social isolation from peers, aggression, running away, and substance abuse.[14][15] Goals in treating adolescents with music therapy, especially for those at high risk, often include increased recognition and awareness of emotions and moods, improved decision-making skills, opportunities for creative self expression, decreased anxiety, increased self-confidence, improved self-esteem, and better listening skills.[16]

There is some evidence that, when combined with other types of rehabilitation, music therapy may contribute to the success rate of sensorimotor, cognitive, and communicative rehabilitation.[17] For children and adolescents with major depressive or anxiety disorders, there is moderate to low quality evidence that music therapy added to the standard treatment may reduce internalizing symptoms and may be more effective than treatment as usual (without music therapy).[18][19]

Methods

Among adolescents, group meetings and individual sessions are the main methods for music therapy. Both methods may include listening to music, discussing concerning moods and emotions in or toward music, analyzing the meanings of specific songs, writing lyrics, composing or performing music, and musical improvisation.[15]

Private individual sessions can provide personal attention and are most effective when using music preferred by the patient. Using music that adolescents can relate to or connect with can help adolescent patients view the therapist as safe and trustworthy, and to engage in therapy with less resistance.[15] Music therapy conducted in groups allows adolescent individuals to feel a sense of belonging, express their opinions, learn how to socialize and verbalize appropriately with peers, improve compromising skills, and develop tolerance and empathy.[14] Group sessions that emphasize cooperation and cohesion can be effective in working with adolescents.[20]

Music therapy intervention programs typically include about 18 sessions of treatment. The achievement of a physical rehabilitation goal relies on the child's existing motivation and feelings towards music and their commitment to engage in meaningful, rewarding efforts. Regaining full functioning also confides in the prognosis of recovery, the condition of the client, and the environmental resources available. Both techniques use systematic processes where the therapists assist the client by using musical experiences and connections that collaborate as a dynamic force of change toward rehabilitation.[21]

Assessment

Assessment includes obtaining a full medical history, musical (ability to duplicate a melody or identify changes in rhythm, etc.) and non-musical functioning (social, physical/motor, emotional, etc.).[22][23]

Premature infants

Premature infants are those born at 37 weeks after conception or earlier. They are subject to numerous health risks, such as abnormal breathing patterns, decreased body fat and muscle tissue, as well as feeding issues. The coordination for sucking and breathing is often not fully developed, making feeding a challenge. Offering musical therapy to premature infants while they are in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) aims to both mask unwanted auditory stimuli, stimulate infant development, and promote a calm environment for families. While there are no reported adverse effects from music therapy, the evidence supporting music therapy's beneficial effects for infants is weak as many of the clinical trials that have been performed either had mixed results or were poorly designed.[24] There is no strong evidence to suggest that music therapy improves an infant's oxygen therapy, improves sucking, or improves development when compared to usual care.[24] There is some weaker evidence that music therapy may decrease an infants' heart rate.[24] There is no evidence to indicate that music therapy reduces anxiety in parents of preterm infants in the NICU or information to understand what type of music therapy may be more beneficial or how for how long.[24]

Medical disorders

Music may both motivate and provide a sense of distraction.[21] Rhythmic stimuli has been found to help balance training for those with a brain injury.[21]

Singing is a form of rehabilitation for neurological impairments. Neurological impairments following a brain injury can be in the form of apraxia – loss to perform purposeful movements, dysarthria, muscle control disturbances (due to damage of the central nervous system), aphasia (defect in expression causing distorted speech), or language comprehension. Singing training has been found to improve lung, speech clarity, and coordination of speech muscles, thus, accelerating rehabilitation of such neurological impairments. For example, melodic intonation therapy is the practice of communicating with others by singing to enhance speech or increase speech production by promoting socialization, and emotional expression.[21]

Autism

Music may help people with autism hone their motor and attention skills as well as healthy neurodevelopment of socio-communication and interaction skills. Music therapy may also contribute to improved selective attention, speech production, and language processing and acquisition in people with autism.[25]

Music therapy may benefit the family as a whole. Some family members of children with autism claim that music therapy sessions have allowed their child to interact more with the family and the world. Music therapy is also beneficial in that it gives children an outlet to use outside of the sessions. Some children after participating in music therapy may want to keep making music long after the sessions end.[26]

Heart disease

Listening to music may improve heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure in those with coronary heart disease (CHD).[27]

Stroke

Music may be a useful tool in the recovery of motor skills.[28]

Dementia

Like many of the other disorders mentioned, some of the most common significant effects of the disorder can be seen in social behaviors, leading to improvements in interaction, conversation, and other such skills. A study of over 330 subjects showed that music therapy produces highly significant improvements in social behaviors, overt behaviors like wandering and restlessness, reductions in agitated behaviors, and improvements to cognitive defects, measured with reality orientation and face recognition tests. The effectiveness of the treatment seems to be strongly dependent on the patient and the quality and length of treatment.[29]

A group of adults with dementia participated in group music therapy.[29] In the group, these adults engaged in singing, drumming, improvisation, and movement. Each of these activities engaged the adults in different ways. The singing aided with memory, as these adults improved memorization skills in by taking out specific words in the chorus of a song and by repeating phrases back to the music therapist when the therapist sang a phrase of a song to them. Drumming led to increased socialization of the group, as it allowed the patients collaborate to create particular rhythms. Improvisation allowed the patients to get out of their comfort zone and taught them how to better deal with anxiety. Lastly, movement with either one arm or two increased social interaction between the patients.[29]

Another meta-study examined the proposed neurological mechanisms behind music therapy's effects on these patients[citation needed]. Many authors suspect that music has a soothing effect on the patient by affecting how noise is perceived: music renders noise familiar, or buffers the patient from overwhelming or extraneous noise in their environment. Others suggest that music serves as a sort of mediator for social interactions, providing a vessel through which to interact with others without requiring much cognitive load.[29]

Aphasia

Broca's aphasia, or non-fluent aphasia, is a language disorder caused by damage to Broca's area and surrounding regions in the left frontal lobe.[30] Those with non-fluent aphasia are able to understand language fairly well, but they struggle with language production and syntax.[31]

Neurologist Oliver Sacks, studied neurological oddities in people, trying to understand how the brain works. He concluded that people with some type of frontal lobe damage often "produced not only severe difficulties with expressive language (aphasia) but a strange access of musicality with incessant whistling, singing and a passionate interest in music. For him, this was an example of normally suppressed brain functions being released by damage to others".[32] Sacks had a genuine interest in trying to help people affected with neurological disorders and other phenomena associated with music, and how it can provide access to otherwise unreachable emotional states, revivify neurological avenues that have been frozen, evoke memories of earlier, lost events or states of being and attempts to bring those with neurological disorders back to a time when the world was much richer for them. He was a firm believer that music has the power to heal.

Melodic intonation therapy (MIT), developed in 1973 by neurological researchers Sparks, Helm, and Albert, is a method used by music therapists and speech–language pathologists to help people with communication disorders caused by damage to the left hemisphere of the brain by engaging the singing abilities and possibly engaging language-capable regions in the undamaged right hemisphere.[33][34]

While unable to speak fluently, patients with non-fluent aphasia are often able to sing words, phrases, and even sentences they cannot express otherwise.[35] MIT harnesses the singing ability of patients with non-fluent aphasia as a means to improve their communication. Although its exact nature depends on the therapist, in general MIT relies on the use of intonation (the rising and falling of the voice) and rhythm (beat/speed) to train patients to produce phrases verbally.[34] In MIT, common words and phrases are turned into melodic phrases, generally starting with two step sing-song patterns and eventually emulating typical speech intonation and rhythmic patterns.[33] A therapist will usually begin by introducing an intonation to their patient through humming.[34] They will accompany this humming with a rhythm produced by the tapping of the left hand.[34] At the same time, the therapist will introduce a visual stimuli of the written phrase to be learned.[34] The therapist then sings the phrase with the patient, and ideally the patient is eventually able to sing the phrase on their own.[34] With much repetition and through a process of "inner-rehearsal" (practicing internally hearing one's voice singing), a patient may eventually be able to produce the phrase verbally without singing.[34] As the patient advances in therapy, the procedure can be adapted to give them more autonomy and to teach them more complex phrases.[34] Through the use of MIT, a non-fluent aphasic patient can be taught numerous phrases which aid them to communicate and function during daily life.

The mechanisms of this success are yet to be fully understood. It is commonly agreed that while speech is lateralized mostly to the left hemisphere (for right-handed and most left-handed individuals), some speech functionality is also distributed in the right hemisphere.[36] MIT is thought to stimulate these right language areas through the activation of music processing areas also in the right hemisphere[37] Similarly, the rhythmic tapping of the left hand stimulates the right sensorimotor cortex to further engage the right hemisphere in language production.[37] Overall, by stimulating the right hemisphere during language tasks, therapists hope to decrease dependence on the left hemisphere for language production.[34]

While results are somewhat contradictory, studies have in fact found increased right hemispheric activation in non-fluent aphasic patients after MIT.[37] This change in activation has been interpreted as evidence of decreased dependence on the left hemisphere.[37] There is debate, however, as to whether changes in right hemispheric activation are part of the therapeutic process during/after MIT, or are simply a side effect of non-fluent aphasia.[38] In hopes of making MIT more effective, researchers are continually studying the mechanisms of MIT and non-fluent aphasia.

Cancer

There is tentative evidence that music interventions led by a trained music therapist may have positive effects on psychological and physical outcomes in adults with cancer. The effectiveness of music therapy for children with cancer is not known.[39]

Mental health

There is weak evidence to suggest that people with schizophrenia may benefit from the addition of music therapy along with their other standard treatment regieme.[40][41] Potential improvements include decreased aggression, less hallucinations and delusions, social functioning, and quality of life of people with schizophrenia or schizophrenia-like disorders.[40][41] In addition, moderate-to-low-quality evidence suggests that music therapy as an addition to standard care improves the global state, mental state (including negative and general symptoms). Further research using standardized music therapy programs and consistent monitoring protocols are necessary to understand the effectiveness of this approach for adults with schizophrenia.[41] Music therapy may be a useful tool for helping treat people with post-traumatic stress disorder however more rigorous empirical study is required.[42]

For adults with depressive symptoms, there is some weak evidence to suggest that music therapy may help reduce symptoms and recreative music therapy and guided imagery and music being superior to other methods in reducing depressive symptoms.[43]

In the use of music therapy for adults, there is "music medicine" which is called for listening to prerecorded music as treated like a medicine. Music Therapy also uses "Receptive music therapy" using "music-assisted relaxation" and using images connecting to the music.[43]

There is some discussion on the process of change facilitated by musical activities on mental wellness. Scholars proposed a six-dimensional framework, which contains emotional, psychological, social, cognitive, behavioral and spiritual aspects. Through conducting interview sessions with mental health service users (with mood disorders, anxiety disorders, schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders), their study showed the relevance of the six-dimensional framework.[44]

Impact of Music Therapy on General Mental Health

Music therapy has been used to help bring improvements to mental health among people of all age groups. It has been used as far back as the 1830s. One example of a mental hospital that used music therapy to aid in the healing process of their patients includes the Hanwell Lunatic Asylum. This mental hospital provided "music and movement sessions and musical performances" as well as "group and individual music therapy for patients with serious mental illness or emotional problems."[45] Two main categories of music therapy were used in this study; analytic music therapy and Nordoff-Robbins music therapy. Analytic music therapy involves both words and music, while Nordoff-Robbins music therapy places great emphasis on assessing how clients react to music therapy and how the use of this type of therapy can be constantly altered and shifted to allow it to benefit the client the most.[45]

Bereavement

The DSM-IV TR (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) lists bereavement as a mental health diagnosis when the focus of clinical attention is related to the loss of a loved one and when symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder are present for up to two months. Music therapy models have been found to be successful in treating grief and bereavement (Rosner, Kruse & Hagl, 2010)[citation needed].In many countries, including the United States, music therapists do not diagnose, therefore diagnosing a bereavement-related disorder would not be within their scope of practice.

Grief Treatment for Adolescents

Grief treatment is very valuable within the adolescent age group. Just as adults and the elderly struggle with grief from loss, relationship issues, job-related stress, and financial issues, so do adolescents also experience grief from disappointments that occur early on in life, however different these disappointing life events may be. For example, many people of adolescent age experience life-altering events such as parental divorce, trauma from emotional or physical abuse, struggles within school, and loss. If this grief is not acted upon early on through the use of some kind of therapy, it can alter the entire course of an adolescent's life. In one particular study on the impact of music therapy on grief management within adolescents used songwriting to allow these adolescents to express what they were feeling through lyrics and instrumentals. In the article Development of the Grief Process Scale through music therapy songwriting with bereaved adolescents, the results of the study demonstrate that in all of the treatment groups combined, the mean GPS (grief process scale) score decreased by 43%.[46] The use of music therapy songwriting allowed these adolescents to become less overwhelmed with grief and better able to process it as demonstrated by the decrease in mean GPS score.

Empirical evidence

Since 2017, providing evidence-based practice is becoming more and more important and music therapy has been continuously critiqued and regulated to provide that desired evidence-based practice. A number of research studies and meta-analyses have been conducted on, or included, music therapy and all have found that music therapy has at least some promising effects, especially when used for the treatment of grief and bereavement. The AMTA has largely supported the advancement of music therapy through research that would promote evidenced-based practice. With the definition of evidence-based health care as "the conscientious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients or the delivery of health services, current best evidence is up-to-date information from relevant, valid research about the effects of different forms of health care, the potential for harm from exposure to particular agents, the accuracy of diagnostic tests, and the predictive power of prognostic factors".[47]

Both qualitative and quantitative studies have been completed and both have provided evidence to support music therapy in the use of bereavement treatment. One study that evaluated a number of treatment approaches found that only music therapy had significant positive outcomes where the others showed little improvement in participants (Rosner, Kruse & Hagl, 2010)[citation needed]. Furthermore, a pilot study, which consisted of an experimental and control group, examined the effects of music therapy on mood and behaviors in the home and school communities. It was found that there was a significant change in grief symptoms and behaviors with the experimental group in the home, but conversely found that there was no significant change in the experimental group in the school community, despite the fact that mean scores on the Depression Self-Rating Index and the Behavior Rating Index decreased (Hilliard, 2001)[citation needed]. Yet another study completed by Russel Hilliard (2007), looked at the effects of Orff-based music therapy and social work groups on childhood grief symptoms and behaviors. Using a control group that consisted of wait-listed clients, and employing the Behavior Rating Index for Children and the bereavement Group Questionnaire for Parents and Guardians as measurement tools, it was found that children who were in the music therapy group showed significant improvement in grief symptoms and also showed some improvement in behaviors compared to the control group, whereas the social work group also showed significant improvement in both grief and behaviors compared to the control group. The study concludes with support for music therapy as a medium from bereavement groups for children (Hilliard, 2007)[citation needed].

Though there has been research done on music therapy, and though the use of it has been evaluated, there remain a number of limitations in these studies and further research should be completed before absolute conclusions are made, though the results of using music therapy in the treatment have consistently shown to be positive.[citation needed]

Music therapy practice is working together with clients, through music, to promote healthy change (Bruscia, 1998). The American Music Therapy Association (AMTA) has defined the practice of music therapy as "a behavioral science concerned with changing unhealthy behaviors and replacing them with more adaptive ones through the use of musical stimuli".[48]

Interventions

Though music therapy practice employs a large number of intervention techniques, some of the most commonly used interventions include improvisation, therapeutic singing, therapeutic instrumental music playing, music-facilitated reminiscence and life review, songwriting, music-facilitated relaxation, and lyric analysis. While there has been no conclusive research done on the comparison of interventions (Jones, 2005; Silverman, 2008; Silverman & Marcionetti, 2004)[citation needed], the use of particular interventions is individualized to each client based upon thorough assessment of needs, and the effectiveness of treatment may not rely on the type of intervention (Silverman, 2009)[citation needed].

Improvisation in music therapy allows for clients to make up, or alter, music as they see fit. While improvisation is an intervention in a methodical practice, it does allow for some freedom of expression, which is what it is often used for. Improvisation has several other clinical goals as well, which can also be found on the Improvisation in music therapy page, such as: facilitating verbal and nonverbal communication, self-exploration, creating intimacy, teamwork, developing creativity, and improving cognitive skills.[49] Building on these goals, Botello and Krout designed a cognitive behavioral application to assess and improve communication in couples.[50] Further research is needed before the use of improvisation is conclusively proven to be effective in this application, but there were positive signs in this study of its use.

Singing or playing an instrument is often used to help clients express their thoughts and feelings in a more structured manner than improvisation and can also allow participation with only limited knowledge of music. Singing in a group can facilitate a sense of community and can also be used as group ritual to structure a theme of the group or of treatment (Krout, 2005)[citation needed].

Research that compares types of music therapy intervention has been inconclusive. Music Therapists use lyric analysis in a variety of ways, but typically lyric analysis is used to facilitate dialogue with clients based on the lyrics, which can then lead to discussion that addresses the goals of therapy.[51]

Types of music therapy

Two fundamental types of music therapy are receptive music therapy and active music therapy (also known as expressive music therapy). Active music therapy engages clients or patients in the act of making music, whereas receptive music therapy guides patients or clients in listening or responding to live or recorded music.[52] Either or both can lead to verbal discussions, depending on client needs and the therapist's orientation.

Receptive

Receptive music therapy involves listening to recorded or live genres of music such as classical, rock, jazz, and/or country music.[53] In Receptive music therapy, patients are the recipient of the music experience, meaning that they are actively listening and responding to the music rather than creating it. During music sessions, patients participate in song discussion, music relaxation, and are given the ability to listen to their preferred music genre. It can improve mood, decrease stress, decrease pain, enhance relaxation, and decrease anxiety; this can help with coping skills.[54] There is also evidence of biochemical changes (e.g., lowered cortisol levels).[55]

Active

In active music therapy, patients engage in some form of music-making (e.g., vocalizing, rapping, chanting, singing, playing instruments, improvising, song writing, composing, or conducting). Researchers at Baylor, Scott, and White Universities are studying the effect of harmonica playing on patients with COPD to determine if it helps improve lung function.[56] Another example of active music therapy takes place in a nursing home in Japan: therapists teach the elderly how to play easy-to-use instruments so they can overcome physical difficulties.[57]

Models and approaches

Music therapist Kenneth Bruscia stated "A model is a comprehensive approach to assessment, treatment, and evaluation that includes theoretical principles, clinical indications and contraindications, goals, methodological guidelines and specifications, and the characteristic use of certain procedural sequences and techniques."[58]: 129  In the literature, the terms model, orientation, or approach might be encountered and may have slightly different meanings. Regardless, music therapists use both psychology models and models specific to music therapy. The theories these models are based on include beliefs about human needs, causes of distress, and how humans grow or heal.

Models developed specifically for music therapy include analytical music therapy,[58]: 230 [59] Benenzon,[60]: 143–144  the Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music (GIM),[58]: 230 [59] community music therapy,[61] Nordoff-Robbins music therapy (creative music therapy),[58]: 230 [59] neurologic music therapy,[62] and vocal psychotherapy.[59]

Psychological orientations used in music therapy include psychodynamic,[63] cognitive behavioral,[64] humanistic,[65] existential,[58]: 230  and the biomedical model.[66]

The Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music

To be trained in this method, students are required to be healthcare professionals.[67] Some courses are only open to music therapists and mental health professionals.[68]

Music educator and therapist Helen Lindquist Bonny (1921–2010) developed an approach influenced by humanistic and transpersonal psychological views, known as the Bonny Method of guided imagery in music (BGIM or GIM). Guided imagery refers to a technique used in natural and alternative medicine that involves using mental imagery to help with the physiological and psychological ailments of patients.[69]

The practitioner often suggests a relaxing and focusing image, and through the use of imagination and discussion, they aim to find constructive solutions to manage their problems. Bonny applied this psychotherapeutic method to the field of music therapy by using music as the means of guiding the patient to a higher state of consciousness where healing and constructive self-awareness can take place. Music is considered a "co-therapist" because of its importance. GIM with children can be used in one-on-one or group settings, and involves relaxation techniques, identification and sharing of personal feeling states, and improvisation to discover the self, and foster growth. The choice of music is carefully selected for the client based on their musical preferences and the goals of the session. The piece is usually classical, and it must reflect the age and attention abilities of the child in length and genre. A full explanation of the exercises must be offered at their level of understanding.[69]

Nordoff-Robbins

Paul Nordoff, a Juilliard School graduate and Professor of Music, was a pianist and composer who, upon seeing disabled children respond so positively to music, gave up his academic career to further investigate the possibility of music as a means for therapy. Clive Robbins, a special educator, partnered with Nordoff for over 17 years in the exploration and research of music's effects on disabled children—first in the UK, and then in the United States in the 1950s and 60s. Their pilot projects included placements at care units for autistic children and child psychiatry departments, where they put programs in place for children with mental disorders, emotional disturbances, developmental delays, and other handicaps. Their success at establishing a means of communication and relationship with children with cognitive impairments at the University of Pennsylvania gave rise to the National Institutes of Health's first grant given of this nature, and the 5-year study "Music therapy project for psychotic children under seven at the day care unit" involved research, publication, training and treatment.[70][page needed] Several publications, including Therapy in Music for Handicapped Children, Creative Music Therapy, Music Therapy in Special Education, as well as instrumental and song books for children, were released during this time. Nordoff and Robbins's success became known globally in the mental health community, and they were invited to share their findings and offer training on an international tour that lasted several years. Funds were granted to support the founding of the Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Centre[71] in Great Britain in 1974, where a one-year graduate program for students was implemented. In the early eighties, a center was opened in Australia, and various programs and institutes for music therapy were founded in Germany and other countries. In the United States, the Nordoff-Robbins Center for Music Therapy was established at New York University in 1989[72]

Today, Nordoff-Robbins is a music therapy Theoretical Model / Approach.[73] The Nordoff-Robbins approach, based on the belief that everyone is capable of finding meaning in and benefiting from musical experience, is now practiced by hundreds of therapists internationally. This approach focuses on treatment through the creation of music by both therapist and client together. The therapist uses various techniques so that even the most low functioning individuals can actively participate.[74]

Orff

Gertrude Orff developed Orff Music Therapy at the Kinderzentrum München. Both the clinical setting of social pediatrics and the Orff Schulwerk (schoolwork) approach in music education (developed by German composer Carl Orff) influence this method, which is used with children with developmental problems, delays, and disabilities.[75] Theodor Hellbrügge developed the area of social pediatrics after the Second World War in Germany. He understood that medicine alone could not meet the complex needs of developmentally disabled children. Hellbrügge consulted psychologists, occupational therapists and other mental healthcare professionals whose knowledge and skills could aid in the diagnostics and treatment of children. Gertrude Orff was asked to develop a form of therapy based on the Orff Schulwerk approach to support the emotional development of patients. Elements found in both the music therapy and education approaches include the understanding of holistic music presentation as involving word, sound and movement, the use of both music and play improvisation as providing a creative stimulus for the child to investigate and explore, Orff instrumentation, including keyboard instruments and percussion instruments as a means of participation and interaction in a therapeutic setting, and the multisensory aspects of music used by the therapist to meet the particular needs of the child, such as both feeling and hearing sound.[75]

Corresponding with the attitudes of humanistic psychology, the developmental potential of the child, as in the acknowledgement of their strengths as well as their handicaps, and the importance of the therapist-child relationship, are central factors in Orff music therapy. The strong emphasis on social integration and the involvement of parents in the therapeutic process found in social pediatrics also influence theoretical foundations. Knowledge of developmental psychology puts into perspective how developmental disabilities influence the child, as do their social and familial environments. The basis for interaction in this method is known as responsive interaction, in which the therapist meets the child at their level and responds according to their initiatives, combining both humanistic and developmental psychology philosophies. Involving the parents in this type of interaction by having them participate directly or observe the therapist's techniques equips the parents with ideas of how to interact appropriately with their child, thus fostering a positive parent-child relationship.[75]

Cultural aspects

Through the ages music has been an integral component of rituals, ceremonies, healing practices, and spiritual and cultural traditions.[3] Further, Michael Bakan, author of World Music: Traditions and Transformations, states that "Music is a mode of cultural production and can reveal much about how the culture works," [76] something ethnomusicologists study.

Cultural considerations in music therapy services, education, and research

The 21st century is a culturally pluralistic world. In some countries, such as the United States, an individual may have multiple cultural identities that are quite different from the music therapist's. These include race; ethnicity, culture, and/or heritage; religion; sex; ability/disability; education; or socioeconomic status.[77][78][79] Music therapists strive to achieve multicultural competence through a lifelong journey of formal and informal education and self-reflection. Multicultural therapy "uses modalities and defines goals consistent with the life experiences and cultural values of clients"[80]: 6  rather than basing therapy on the therapist's worldview or the dominant culture's norms.

Empathy in general is an important aspect of any mental health practitioner and the same is true for music therapists, as is multicultural awareness. It is the added complexity to cultural empathy that comes from adding music that provides both the greater risk and potential to provide exceptional culturally sensitive therapy (Valentino, 2006). An extensive knowledge of a culture is really needed to provide this effective treatment as providing culturally sensitive music therapy goes beyond knowing the language of speech, the country, or even some background about the culture. Simply choosing music that is from the same country of origin or that has the same spoken language is not effective for providing music therapy as music genres vary as do the messages each piece of music sends. Also, different cultures view and use music in various ways and may not always be the same as how the therapist views and uses music. Melody Schwantes and her colleagues wrote an article that describes the effective use of the Mexican "corrido" in a bereavement group of Mexican migrant farm workers (Schwantes, Wigram, Lipscomb & Richards, 2011). This support group was dealing with the loss of two of their coworkers after an accident they were in and so the corrido, a song form traditionally used for telling stories of the deceased. An important element that was also mentioned was that songwriting has shown to be a large cultural artifact in many cultures, and that there are many subtle messages and thoughts provided in songs that would otherwise be hard to identify. Lastly, the authors of this study stated that "Given the position and importance of songs in all cultures, the example in this therapeutic process demonstrates the powerful nature of lyrics and music to contain and express difficult and often unspoken feelings" (Schwantes et al., 2011).

Usage by region

African continent

In 1999, the first program for music therapy in Africa opened in Pretoria, South Africa. Research has shown that in Tanzania patients can receive palliative care for life-threatening illnesses directly after the diagnosis of these illnesses. This is different from many Western countries, because they reserve palliative care for patients who have an incurable illness. Music is also viewed differently between Africa and Western countries. In Western countries and a majority of other countries throughout the world, music is traditionally seen as entertainment whereas in many African cultures, music is used in recounting stories, celebrating life events, or sending messages.[81]

Australia

Music for healing in ancient times

One of the first groups known to heal with sound were the aboriginal people of Australia. The modern name of their healing tool is the didgeridoo, but it was originally called the yidaki. The yidaki produced sounds that are similar to the sound healing techniques used in modern day. The sound of the didgeridoo produces a low, bass frequency. For at least 40,000 years, the healing tool was believed to assist in healing "broken bones, muscle tears and illnesses of every kind".[82] However, here are no reliable sources stating the didgeridoo's exact age. Archaeological studies of rock art in Northern Australia suggest that the people of the Kakadu region of the Northern Territory have been using the didgeridoo for less than 1,000 years, based on the dating of paintings on cave walls and shelters from this period. A clear rock painting in Ginga Wardelirrhmeng, on the northern edge of the Arnhem Land plateau, from the freshwater period[83] (that had begun 1500 years ago)[84] shows a didgeridoo player and two songmen participating in an Ubarr ceremony.[85]

Music Therapy in modern times – An allied health profession

1949 in Australia, music therapy (not clinical music therapy as understood today) was started through concerts organized by the Australian Red Cross along with a Red Cross Music Therapy Committee. The key Australian body, the Australian Music Therapy Association (AMTA), was founded in 1975.

Canada

History: ca1940 – present

For earlier history related to western traditions, see § Western cultures sub-section.

In 1956, Fran Herman, one of Canada's music therapy pioneers, began a 'remedial music' program at the Home For Incurable Children, now known as the Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, in Toronto. Her group 'The Wheelchair Players' continued until 1964, and is considered to be the first music therapy group project in Canada.[86] Its production "The Emperor's Nightingale" was the subject of a documentary film.

Composer/pianist Alfred Rosé, a professor at the University of Western Ontario, also pioneered the use of music therapy in London, Ontario at Westminster Hospital in 1952 and at the London Psychiatric Hospital in 1956.[87]

Two other music therapy programs were initiated during the 1950s; one by Norma Sharpe at St. Thomas Psychiatric Hospital in St. Thomas, Ontario, and the other by Thérèse Pageau at the Hôpital St-Jean-de-Dieu (now Hôpital Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine) in Montreal.

A conference in August 1974, organized by Norma Sharpe and six other music therapists, led to the founding of the Canadian Music Therapy Association, which was later renamed the Canadian Association for Music Therapy (CAMT).[88] As of 2009, the organization had over 500 members.

Canada's first music therapy training program was founded in 1976, at Capilano College (now Capilano University) in North Vancouver, by Nancy McMaster and Carolyn Kenny.[89]

China

The relationship between music therapy and health has long been documented in ancient China.

It is said that in ancient times, really good traditional Chinese medicine did not use acupuncture or traditional Chinese medicine, but music: at the end of a song, people were safe when they were discharged. As early as before the spring and Autumn period and the Warring States period, the Yellow Emperor's Canon of internal medicine believed that the five tones (Palace, Shang, horn, emblem and feather) belonged to the five elements (gold, wood, water, fire and earth), and were associated with five basic emotions (joy, anger, worry, thought and fear), that is, the five chronicles. Different music such as palace, Shang, horn, micro and feather were used to target different diseases.

More than 2000 years ago, the book Yue Ji also talked about the important role of music in regulating life harmony and improving health; "Zuo Zhuan" recorded the famous doctors of the state of Qin and the discussion that music can prevent and treat diseases: "there are six or seven days, the hair is colorless, the emblem is five colors, and sex produces six diseases." It is emphasized that silence should be controlled and appropriate in order to have a beneficial regulating effect on the human body; The book "the soul and the body flow, the spirit also flows"; Zhang Jingyue and Xu Lingtai, famous medical experts in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, also specially discussed phonology and medicine in the "classics with wings" and "Yuefu Chuansheng".

For example, Liu Xueyu, one of the emperors of the Tang Dynasty, cured some stubborn diseases through the records of music in the Tang Dynasty.

Chinese contemporary music therapy began in the 1980s. In 1984, Professor Zhang Boyuan of the Department of psychology of Peking University published the experimental report on the research of physical and mental defense of music, which was the first published scientific research article on music therapy in China; In 1986, Professor Gao Tian of Beijing Conservatory of music published his paper "Research on the relieving effect of music on pain";

In 1989, the Chinese society of therapeutics was officially established; In 1994, pukaiyuan published his monograph music therapy; In 1995, he Huajun and Lu Tingzhu published a monograph music therapy; In 2000, Zhang Hongyi edited and published fundamentals of music therapy; In 2002, fan Xinsheng edited and published music therapy; In 2007, Gao Tian edited and published the basic theory of music therapy.

In short, Chinese music therapy has made rapid progress in theoretical research, literature review and clinical research. In addition, the music therapy methods under the guidance of ancient Chinese music therapy theory and traditional Chinese medicine theory with a long history have attracted worldwide attention. The prospect of Chinese music therapy is broad.[90]

Germany

The Germany Music Therapy Society defines music therapy as the "targeted use of music as part of a therapeutic relationship to restore, maintain and promote mental, physical and cognitive health [Musiktherapie ist der gezielte Einsatz von Musik im Rahmen der therapeutischen Beziehung zur Wiederherstellung, Erhaltung und Förderung seelischer, körperlicher und geistiger Gesundheit]."[91]

India

The roots of musical therapy in India can be traced back to ancient Hindu mythology, Vedic texts, and local folk traditions.[92] It is very possible that music therapy has been used for hundreds of years in Indian culture. In the 1990s, another dimension to this, known as Musopathy, was postulated by Indian musician Chitravina Ravikiran based on fundamental criteria derived from acoustic physics.

The Indian Association of Music Therapy was established in 2010 by Dr. Dinesh C. Sharma with a motto "to use pleasant sounds in a specific manner like drug in due course of time as green medicine".[93] He also published the International Journal of Music Therapy (ISSN 2249-8664) to popularize and promote music therapy research on an international platform.[94]

Suvarna Nalapat has studied music therapy in the Indian context. Her books Nadalayasindhu-Ragachikitsamrutam (2008), Music Therapy in Management Education and Administration (2008) and Ragachikitsa (2008) are accepted textbooks on music therapy and Indian arts.[95][96][97][98][99]

The Music Therapy Trust of India is another venture in the country. It was started by Margaret Lobo.[100] She is the founder and director of the Otakar Kraus Music Trust and her work began in 2004.[101]

Lebanon

In 2006, Hamda Farhat introduced music therapy to Lebanon, developing and inventing therapeutic methods such as the triple method to treat hyperactivity, depression, anxiety, addiction, and post traumatic stress disorder. She has met with great success in working with many international organizations, and in the training of therapists, educators, and doctors.[citation needed] The Lebanese Association Of Music Therapy L.A.M.T ref number 65 is the only reference at Lebanon, the president Dr Hamda farhat, members administer Dr Antoine chartouni, Dr Elia Francis Safi TRAINING and Formation

Norway

Norway is recognized as an important country for music therapy research. Its two major research centers are the Center for Music and Health[102] with the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo, and the Grieg Academy Centre for Music Therapy (GAMUT),[103] at University of Bergen. The former was mostly developed by professor Even Ruud, while professor Brynjulf Stige is largely responsible for cultivating the latter. The center in Bergen has 18 staff, including 2 professors and 4 associate professors, as well as lecturers and PhD students. Two of the field's major international research journals are based in Bergen: Nordic Journal for Music Therapy[104] and Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy.[105] Norway's main contribution to the field is mostly in the area of "community music therapy", which tends to be as much oriented toward social work as individual psychotherapy, and music therapy research from this country uses a wide variety of methods to examine diverse methods across an array of social contexts, including community centers, medical clinics, retirement homes, and prisons.

Nigeria

The origins of Musical therapy practices in Nigeria is unknown, however the country is identified to have a lengthy lineage and history of musical therapy being utilized throughout the culture. The most common people associated with music therapy are herbalists, Witch doctors, and faith healers according to Professor Charles O. Aluede of Ambrose Alli University (Ekpoma, Edo State, Nigeria).[106] Applying music and thematic sounds to the healing process is believed to help the patient overcome true sickness in his/her mind which then will seemingly cure the disease. Another practice involving music is called "Igbeuku", a religious practice performed by faith healers. In the practice of Igbeuku, patients are persuaded to confess their sins which cause themselves serve discomfort. Following a confession, patients feel emotionally relieved because the priest has announced them clean and subjected them to a rigorous dancing exercise. The dancing exercise is a "thank you" for the healing and tribute to the spiritual greater beings. The dance is accompanied by music and can be included among the unorthodox medical practices of Nigerian culture. While most of the music therapy practices come in the medical field, musical therapy is often used in the passing of a loved one. The use of song and dance in a funeral setting is very common across the continent but especially in Nigeria. Songs allude to the idea the finally resting place is Hades (hell). The music helps alleviate the sorrows felt by the family members and friends of the lost loved one. Along with music therapy being a practice for funeral events, it is also implemented to those dying as a last resort tactic of healing. The Esan of Edo State of Nigeria, in particular, herbalists perform practices with an Oko – a small aerophone made of elephant tusk which is blown into dying patients' ears to resuscitate them. Nigeria is full of interesting cultural practices in which contribute a lot to the music therapy world.[citation needed]

South Africa

There are longstanding traditions of music healing, which in some ways may be very different than music therapy.[107]

Mercédès Pavlicevic (1955-2018),[108][109] an international music therapist, along with Kobie Temmingh, pioneered the music therapy program at the University of Pretoria, which debuted with a master's degree program in 1999. She noted the differences in longstanding traditions and other ways of viewing healing or music. A Nigerian colleague felt "that music in Africa is healing, and what is music therapy other than some colonial import?"[107] Pavlicevic noted that "in Africa there is a long tradition of music healing" and asked "Can there be a synthesis of these two music-based practices towards something new?... I am not altogether convinced that African music healing and music therapy are especially closely related [emphasis added]. But I am utterly convinced that music therapy can learn an enormous amount from the African worldview and from music-making in Africa – rather than from African music-healing as such."[107]

The South African Music Therapy Association can provide information to the public about music therapy or educational programs in South Africa.[110]

South Africa was selected to host the 16th World Congress of Music Therapy in July 2020, a triennial World Federation of Music Therapy event. Due to the coronavirus pandemic (SARS-CoV-2) the congress was moved to an online event.[111]

United States

Credential

  • National board certification (current as of 2021): MT-BC (Music Therapist-Board Certified, also written as Board Certified Music Therapist)[112]
  • State license or registration: varies by state, see below
  • The credentials listed below were previously conferred by the former national organizations AAMT and NAMT; these credentials have not been available since 1998.[113]
    • CMT (Certified Music Therapist)
    • ACMT (Advanced Certified Music Therapist)
    • RMT (Registered Music Therapist). There are other countries that use RMT as a credential, such as Australia,[114] that is different from the U.S. credential.

The states of Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, North Dakota, Nevada, New Jersey,[115] Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Virginia[116] have established licenses for music therapists,[117][118] while in Wisconsin, music therapists must be registered, and in Utah hold state certification.[117][118] In the State of New York, the Creative Arts Therapy license (LCAT) incorporates the music therapy credential within their licensure, a mental health license that requires a master's degree and post-graduate supervision.[119] The states of California and Connecticut have title protection[118] for music therapists, meaning only those with the MT-BC credential can use the title "Board Certified Music Therapist".

Professional Association

The American Music Therapy Association (AMTA).

Education

Publication on music therapy education and training has been detailed in both single author (Goodman, 2011) and edited (Goodman, 2015, 2023) volumes. The register of the European Music Therapy Confederation lists all educational training programs throughout Europe.

A music therapy degree candidate can earn an undergraduate, master's or doctoral degree in music therapy. Many AMTA approved programs in the United States offer equivalency and certificate degrees in music therapy for students that have completed a degree in a related field. Some practicing music therapists have held PhDs either in music therapy or in fields related to music therapy. A music therapist typically incorporates music therapy techniques with broader clinical practices such as psychotherapy, rehabilitation, and other practices depending on client needs. Music therapy services rendered within the context of a social service, educational, or health care agency are often reimbursable by insurance or other sources of funding for individuals with certain needs.

A degree in music therapy requires proficiency in guitar, piano, voice, music theory, music history, reading music, improvisation, as well as varying levels of skill in assessment, documentation, and other counseling and health care skills depending on the focus of the particular university's program. 1200 hours of clinical experience are required, some of which are gained during an approximately six-month internship that takes place after all other degree requirements are met.[112]

After successful completion of educational requirements, including internship, music therapists can apply to take, take, and pass the Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy.

Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy

The current national credential is MT-BC (Music Therapist-Board Certified). It is not required in all states. To be eligible to apply to take the Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy, an individual must successfully complete a music therapy degree from a program accredited by AMTA at a college or university (or have a bachelor's degree and complete all of the music therapy course requirements from an accredited program), which includes successfully completing a music therapy internship. To maintain the credential, 100 units of continuing education must be completed every five years. The board exam is created by and administered through The Certification Board for Music Therapists.[112][120]

History: c. 1900–present

For earlier history related to western traditions, see § Western cultures sub-section.

From a western viewpoint, music therapy in the 20th and 21st centuries (as of 2021), as an evidence-based, allied healthcare profession, grew out of the aftermath of World Wars I and II, when, particularly in the United Kingdom and United States, musicians would travel to hospitals and play music for soldiers suffering from with war-related emotional and physical trauma.[60][121][122] Using music to treat the mental and physical ailments of active duty military and veterans was not new. Its use was recorded during the U.S. Civil War and Florence Nightingale used it a decade earlier in the Crimean War.[123] Despite research data, observations by doctors and nurses, praise from patients, and willing musicians, it was difficult to vastly increase music therapy services or establish lasting music therapy education programs or organizations in the early 20th century.[60][121] However, many of the music therapy leaders of this time period provided music therapy during WWI or to its veterans. These were pioneers in the field such as Eva Vescelius, musician, author, 1903 founder of the short-lived National Therapeutic Society of New York and the 1913 Music and Health journal, and creator/teacher of a musicotherapy course; Margaret Anderton, pianist, WWI music therapy provider for Canadian soldiers, a strong believer in training for music therapists, and 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher; Isa Maud Ilsen, a nurse and musician who was the American Red Cross Director of Hospital Music in WWI reconstruction hospitals, 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher, 1926 founder of the National Association for Music in Hospitals, and author; and Harriet Ayer Seymour, music therapist to WWI veterans, author, researcher, lecturer/teacher, founder of the National Foundation for Music Therapy in 1941, author of the first music therapy textbook published in the US. Several physicians also promoted music as a therapeutic agent during this time period.[60][121]

In the 1940s, changes in philosophy regarding care of psychiatric patients as well as the influx of WWII veterans in Veterans Administration hospitals renewed interest in music programs for patients.[60][121] Many musicians volunteered to provide entertainment and were primarily assigned to perform on psychiatric wards. Positive changes in patients' mental and physical health were noted by nurses. The volunteer musicians, many of whom had degrees in music education, becoming aware of the powerful effects music could have on patients realized that specialized training was necessary.[60][121] The first music therapy bachelor's degree program was established in 1944 with three others and one master's degree program quickly following: "Michigan State College [now a University] (1944), the University of Kansas [master's degree only] (1946), the College of the Pacific (1947), The Chicago Musical College (1948) and Alverno College (1948)." The National Association for Music Therapy (NAMT), a professional association, was formed in 1950.[124] In 1956 the first music therapy credential in the US, Registered Music Therapist (RMT), was instituted by the NAMT.[60]

The American Music Therapy Association (AMTA) was founded in 1998 as a merger between the National Association for Music Therapy (NAMT, founded in 1950)[125] and the American Association for Music Therapy (AAMT, founded in 1971).[126]

United Kingdom

Live music was used in hospitals after both World Wars as part of the treatment program for recovering soldiers. Clinical music therapy in Britain as it is understood today was pioneered in the 1960s and 1970s by French cellist Juliette Alvin whose influence on the current generation of British music therapy lecturers remains strong. Mary Priestley, one of Juliette Alvin's students, created "analytical music therapy". The Nordoff-Robbins approach to music therapy developed from the work of Paul Nordoff and Clive Robbins in the 1950/60s.

Practitioners are registered with the Health Professions Council and, starting from 2007, new registrants must normally hold a master's degree in music therapy. There are master's level programs in music therapy in Manchester, Bristol, Cambridge, South Wales, Edinburgh and London, and there are therapists throughout the UK. The professional body in the UK is the British Association for Music Therapy[127] In 2002, the World Congress of Music Therapy, coordinated and promoted by the World Federation of Music Therapy, was held in Oxford on the theme of Dialogue and Debate.[128] In November 2006, Dr. Michael J. Crawford and his colleagues again found that music therapy helped the outcomes of schizophrenic patients.[129][130]

Military: active duty, veterans, family members

History

Music therapy finds its roots in the military. The United States Department of War issued Technical Bulletin 187 in 1945, which described the use of music in the recovery of military service members in Army hospitals.[131] The use of music therapy in military settings started to flourish and develop following World War II and research and endorsements from both the United States Army and the Surgeon General of the United States. Although these endorsements helped music therapy develop, there was still a recognized need to assess the true viability and value of music as a medically based therapy. Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the Office of the Surgeon General worked together to lead one of the earliest assessments of a music therapy program. The goal of the study was to understand whether "music presented according to a specific plan" influenced recovery among service members with mental and emotional disorders.[132] Eventually, case reports in reference to this study relayed not only the importance but also the impact of music therapy services in the recovery of military service personnel.

The first university sponsored music therapy course was taught by Margaret Anderton in 1919 at Columbia University.[133] Anderton's clinical specialty was working with wounded Canadian soldiers during World War II, using music-based services to aid in their recovery process.

Today, Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom have both presented an array of injuries; however, the two signature injuries are posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI). These two signature injuries are increasingly common among millennial military service members and in music therapy programs.

A person diagnosed with PTSD can associate a memory or experience with a song they have heard. This can result in either good or bad experiences. If it is a bad experience, the song's rhythm or lyrics can bring out the person's anxiety or fear response. If it is a good experience, the song can bring feelings of happiness or peace which could bring back positive emotions. Either way, music can be used as a tool to bring emotions forward and help the person cope with them.

Methods

Music therapists work with active duty military personnel, veterans, service members in transition, and their families. Music therapists strive to engage clients in music experiences that foster trust and complete participation over the course of their treatment process. Music therapists use an array of music-centered tools, techniques, and activities when working with military-associated clients, many of which are similar to the techniques used in other music therapy settings. These methods include, but are not limited to: group drumming, listening, singing, and songwriting. Songwriting is a particularly effective tool with military veterans struggling with PTSD and TBI as it creates a safe space to, "... work through traumatic experiences, and transform traumatic memories into healthier associations".[134]

Programs

Music therapy in the military is seen in programs on military bases, VA healthcare facilities, military treatment facilities, and military communities. Music therapy programs have a large outreach because they exist for all phases of military life: pre-mobilization, deployment, post-deployment, recovery (in the case of injury), and among families of fallen military service personnel.[135]

The Exceptional Family Member Program (EFMP) also exists to provide music therapy services to active duty military families who have a family member with a developmental, physical, emotional, or intellectual disorder. Currently, programs at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Resounding Joy, Inc., and the Music Institute of Chicago partner with EFMP services to provide music therapy services to eligible military family members.[135]

Music therapy programs primarily target active duty military members and their treatment facility to provide reconditioning among members convalescing in Army hospitals.[136] Although, music therapy programs not only benefit the military but rather a wide range of clients including the U.S. Air Force, American Navy, and U.S. Marines Corp. Individuals exposed to trauma benefit from their essential rehabilitative tools to follow the course of recovery from stress disorders. Music therapists are certified professionals who possess the abilities to determine appropriate interventions to support one recovering from a physically, emotionally, or mentally traumatic experience.[137] In addition to their skills, they play an integral part throughout the treatment process of service members diagnosed with post-traumatic stress or brain injuries. In many cases, self-expression through songwriting or using instruments help restore emotions that can be lost following trauma.[137] Music has a significant effect on troops traveling overseas or between bases because many soldiers view music to be an escape from war, a connection to their homeland and families, or as motivation. By working with a certified music therapist, marines undergo sessions re-instituting concepts of cognition, memory attention, and emotional processing.[138] Although programs primarily focus on phases of military life, other service members such as the U.S. Air Force are eligible for treatment as well. For instance, during a music therapy session, a man begins to play a song to a wounded Airmen. The Airmen says " [music] allows me to talk about something that happened without talking about it".[139] Music allows the active duty airmen to open up about previous experiences while reducing his anxiety level.

History

The use of music to soothe grief has been used since the time of David and King Saul. In I Samuel, David plays the lyre to make King Saul feel relieved and better. It has since been used all over the world for treatment of various issues, though the first recorded use of official "music therapy" was in 1789 – an article titled "Music Physically Considered" by an unknown author was found in Columbian Magazine. The creation and expansion of music therapy as a treatment modality thrived in the early to mid 1900s and while a number of organizations were created, none survived for long. It wasn't until 1950 that the National Association for Music Therapy was founded in New York that clinical training and certification requirements were created. In 1971, the American Association for Music Therapy was created, though at that time called the Urban Federation of Music Therapists. The Certification Board for Music Therapists was created in 1983 which strengthened the practice of music therapy and the trust that it was given. In 1998, the American Music Therapy Association was formed out of a merger between National and American Associations and as of 2017 is the single largest music therapy organization in the world (American music therapy, 1998–2011)[citation needed].

Ancient flutes, carved from ivory and bone, were found by archaeologists, that were determined to be from as far back as 43,000 years ago. He also states that "The earliest fragment of musical notation is found on a 4,000-year-old Sumerian clay tablet, which includes instructions and tuning for a hymn honoring the ruler Lipit-Ishtar. But for the title of oldest extant song, most historians point to "Hurrian Hymn No. 6," an ode to the goddess Nikkal that was composed in cuneiform by the ancient Hurrian's sometime around the 14th century B.C.".[140]

Western cultures

Music and healing

Music has been used as a healing implement for centuries.[141] Apollo is the ancient Greek god of music and of medicine and his son Aesculapius was said to cure diseases of the mind by using song and music. By 5000 BC, music was used for healing by Egyptian priest-physicians.[121] Plato said that music affected the emotions and could influence the character of an individual. Aristotle taught that music affects the soul and described music as a force that purified the emotions. Aulus Cornelius Celsus advocated the sound of cymbals and running water for the treatment of mental disorders. Music as therapy was practiced in the Bible when David played the harp to rid King Saul of a bad spirit (1 Sam 16:23).[142][page needed] As early as 400 B.C., Hippocrates played music for mental patients. In the thirteenth century, Arab hospitals contained music-rooms for the benefit of the patients.[143] In the United States, Native American medicine men often employed chants and dances as a method of healing patients.[144] The Turco-Persian psychologist and music theorist al-Farabi (872–950), known as Alpharabius in Europe, dealt with music for healing in his treatise Meanings of the Intellect, in which he discussed the therapeutic effects of music on the soul.[145] In his De vita libri tres published in 1489, Platonist Marsilio Ficino gives a lengthy account of how music and songs can be used to draw celestial benefits for staying healthy.[146] Robert Burton wrote in the 17th century in his classic work, The Anatomy of Melancholy, that music and dance were critical in treating mental illness, especially melancholia.[147][148][149]

The rise of an understanding of the body and mind in terms of the nervous system led to the emergence of a new wave of music for healing in the eighteenth century. Earlier works on the subject, such as Athanasius Kircher's Musurgia Universalis of 1650 and even early eighteenth-century books such as Michael Ernst Ettmüller's 1714 Disputatio effectus musicae in hominem (Disputation on the Effect of Music on Man) or Friedrich Erhardt Niedten's 1717 Veritophili, still tended to discuss the medical effects of music in terms of bringing the soul and body into harmony. But from the mid-eighteenth century works on the subject such as Richard Brocklesby's 1749 Reflections of Antient and Modern Musick, the 1737 Memoires of the French Academy of Sciences, or Ernst Anton Nicolai's 1745 Die Verbindung der Musik mit der Arzneygelahrheit (The Connection of Music to Medicine), stressed the power of music over the nerves.[150]

Music therapy: 17th – 19th century

After 1800, some books on music and medicine drew on the Brunonian system of medicine, arguing that the stimulation of the nerves caused by music could directly improve or harm health.[151] Throughout the 19th century, an impressive number of books and articles were authored by physicians in Europe and the United States discussing use of music as a therapeutic agent to treat both mental and physical illness.[121][60]

Music therapy: 1900 - c. 1940

From a western viewpoint, music therapy in the 20th and 21st centuries (as of 2021), as an evidence-based, allied healthcare profession, grew out of the aftermath of World Wars I and II. Particularly in the United Kingdom and United States, musicians would travel to hospitals and play music for soldiers with war-related emotional and physical trauma.[60][121][122] Using music to treat the mental and physical ailments of active duty military and veterans was not new. Its use was recorded during the US Civil War and Florence Nightingale used it a decade earlier in the Crimean War.[123] Despite research data, observations by doctors and nurses, praise from patients, and willing musicians, it was difficult to vastly increase music therapy services or establish lasting music therapy education programs or organizations in the early 20th century.[60][121] However, many of the music therapy leaders of this time period provided music therapy during WWI or to its veterans. These were pioneers in the field such as Eva Vescelius, musician, author, 1903 founder of the short-lived National Therapeutic Society of New York and the 1913 Music and Health journal, and creator/teacher of a musicotherapy course; Margaret Anderton, pianist, World War I music therapy provider for Canadian soldiers, a strong believer in training for music therapists, and 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher; Isa Maud Ilsen, a nurse and musician who was the American Red Cross Director of Hospital Music in World War I reconstruction hospitals, 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher, 1926 founder of the National Association for Music in Hospitals, and author; and Harriet Ayer Seymour, music therapist to World War I veterans, author, researcher, lecturer/teacher, founder of the National Foundation for Music Therapy in 1941, author of the first music therapy textbook published in the United States. Several physicians also promoted music as a therapeutic agent during this time period.[60][121]

In the United States, the first music therapy bachelor's degree program was established in 1944 at Michigan State College (now Michigan State University.[60]

For history from the early 20th century to the present, see continents or individual countries in § Usage by region section.

See also

References

[152][153][154][155]

  1. ^ a b American Music Therapy Association. "About Music Therapy & AMTA". About Music Therapy & AMTA. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
  2. ^ Darnley-Smith, Rachel; M Patey, Helen (February 18, 2003). Music Therapy (Creative Therapies in Practice series). London: Sage Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-0761957775.
  3. ^ a b Gaston, E. Thayer (1968). "Man and music". In Gaston, E. Thayer (ed.). Music in Therapy. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 7–29.
  4. ^ Chase, Kristen M. (2002). The Music Therapy Assessment Handbook. Columbus, MO: Southern Pen Publishers.
  5. ^ Gfeller, Kate E. (2008). "Music: A human phenomenon and therapeutic tool". In Davis, William B.; Gfeller, Kate E.; Thaut, Michael H. (eds.). An Introduction to Music Therapy: Theory and Practice (3 ed.). Silver Spring, MD: The American Music Therapy Association. pp. 41–75. ISBN 978-1884914201.
  6. ^ Bruscia, Kenneth E. (1987). "IAP scales and criteria". In Bruscia, Kenneth E. (ed.). Improvisational models of music therapy. Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas. pp. 465–496.
  7. ^ Schneck, Daniel J.; Berger, Dorita S. (2006). The Music Effect: Music Physiology and Clinical Applications. Philadelphia, PA: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 978-1843107712.
  8. ^ Sarrazin, Natalie (2016). "Music: Fundamentals and Educational Roots in the U.S.". Music and the Child. Milne Library: Open SUNY Textbooks. ISBN 9781942341208.
  9. ^ "Musopathy: Mapping music and its medicinal benefits". DT Next. December 31, 2019.
  10. ^ "About Sound Healing | Sound Healing Center".
  11. ^ Gibson, David (2018). The Complete Guide to Sound Healing (2nd ed.), Sound of Light.
  12. ^ McCaffrey T, Edwards J, Fannon D (2011). "Is there a role for music therapy in the recovery approach in mental health?" (PDF). The Arts in Psychotherapy. 38 (3): 185–89. doi:10.1016/j.aip.2011.04.006. hdl:10344/3362.
  13. ^ McCaffrey, Tríona; Edwards, Jane; Fannon, Dominic (2011). "Is there a role for music therapy in the recovery approach in mental health?". The Arts in Psychotherapy. 38 (3): 185–189. doi:10.1016/j.aip.2011.04.006. hdl:10344/3362.
  14. ^ a b Swedberg Yinger, Olivia; Gooding, Lori (July 2014). "Music Therapy and Music Medicine for Children and Adolescents". Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics. 23 (3): 535–53. doi:10.1016/j.chc.2013.03.003. PMID 24975624.
  15. ^ a b c Keen MSocSc, Alexander W. (March 2005). "Using music as a therapy tool to motivate troubled adolescents". Social Work in Health Care. 39:3–4 (3–4): 361–73. doi:10.1300/J010v39n03_09. PMID 15774401. S2CID 25035875.
  16. ^ "Music Therapy with High Risk Adolescents (PDF)" (PDF). American Music Therapy Association, Michigan State University Chapter. Michigan State University. Retrieved August 23, 2018.
  17. ^ LaGasse AB, Thaut MH (April 15, 2012). Music and Rehabilition:Neurological Approaches. pp. 153–63. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199586974.003.0012. ISBN 9780199586974. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  18. ^ Aalbers, Sonja; Fusar-Poli, Laura; Freeman, Ruth E.; Spreen, Marinus; Ket, Johannes Cf; Vink, Annemiek C.; Maratos, Anna; Crawford, Mike; Chen, Xi-Jing (November 2017). "Music therapy for depression". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2017 (11): CD004517. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD004517.pub3. hdl:10044/1/56028. ISSN 1469-493X. PMC 6486188. PMID 29144545.
  19. ^ Geipel J, Koenig J, Hillecke TK, Resch F, Kaess M (January 2018). "Music-based interventions to reduce internalizing symptoms in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis". Journal of Affective Disorders. 225: 647–656. doi:10.1016/j.jad.2017.08.035. PMID 28889050.
  20. ^ Bednarz LF, Nikkel B (1992). "The role of music therapy in the treatment of young adults diagnosed with mental illness and substance abuse". Music Therapy Perspectives. 10: 21–26. doi:10.1093/mtp/10.1.21.
  21. ^ a b c d Stanley P, Ramsey D (November 15, 2012). "Music therapy in physical medicine and rehabilitation". Australian Occupational Therapy Journal. 47 (3): 111–18. doi:10.1046/j.1440-1630.2000.00215.x.
  22. ^ Crowe, Barbara J. (2007). Music Therapy for Children, Adolescents and Adults with Mental Disorders. Silver Springs, MD: American Music Therapy Association, Inc. pp. 201–203. ISBN 978-1884914188.
  23. ^ Crowe, Barbara J. (2007). Music Therapy for Children, Adolescents and Adults with Mental Disorders. Silver Spring, MD: American Music Therapy Association, Inc. p. 18. ISBN 978-1884914188.
  24. ^ a b c d Haslbeck, Friederike B; Mueller, Katharina; Karen, Tanja; Loewy, Joanne; Meerpohl, Joerg J; Bassler, Dirk (September 7, 2023). Cochrane Neonatal Group (ed.). "Musical and vocal interventions to improve neurodevelopmental outcomes for preterm infants". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2023 (9): CD013472. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD013472.pub2. PMC 10483930. PMID 37675934.
  25. ^ Janzen, Thenille Braun; Thaut, Michael H. (2018). "Rethinking the role of music in the neurodevelopment of autism spectrum disorder". Music & Science. 1: 205920431876963. doi:10.1177/2059204318769639.
  26. ^ Thompson, Grace (November 23, 2017). "Long-Term Perspectives of Family Quality of Life Following Music Therapy with Young Children on the Autism Spectrum". Journal of Music Therapy. 54 (4): 432–59. doi:10.1093/jmt/thx013. PMID 29186566. S2CID 4635448.
  27. ^ Bradt J, Dileo C, Potvin N (December 2013). "Music for stress and anxiety reduction in coronary heart disease patients". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021 (12): CD006577. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD006577.pub3. PMC 8454043. PMID 24374731. S2CID 16861063.
  28. ^ Magee WL, Clark I, Tamplin J, Bradt J (January 2017). "Music interventions for acquired brain injury". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 1 (1): CD006787. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD006787.pub3. PMC 6464962. PMID 28103638.
  29. ^ a b c d Keough, Laurie (October 1, 2017). "Assessment-Based Small-Group Music Therapy Programming for Individuals with Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease: A Multi-Year Clinical Project". Music Therapy Perspectives: 181–189. doi:10.1093/mtp/miw021.
  30. ^ Bates, Elizabeth; Wilson, Stephen M.; Saygin, Ayse Pinar; Dick, Frederic; Sereno, Martin I.; Knight, Robert T.; Dronkers, Nina F. (April 21, 2003). "Voxel-based lesion–symptom mapping". Nature Neuroscience. 6 (5): 448–450. doi:10.1038/nn1050. PMID 12704393. S2CID 5134480.
  31. ^ Kolk, Herman; Heeschen, Claus (May 1990). "Adaptation symptoms and impairment symptoms in Broca's aphasia". Aphasiology. 4 (3): 221–231. doi:10.1080/02687039008249075.
  32. ^ Sacks, Oliver (June 28, 2018). Musicophilia : tales of music and the brain. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-1509870141. OCLC 1019654325.
  33. ^ a b Manasco, Hunter (2013). Introduction to neurogenic communication disorders. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 93. ISBN 9780763794170.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i Norton A, Zipse L, Marchina S, Schlaug G (July 2009). "Melodic intonation therapy: shared insights on how it is done and why it might help". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1169: 431–6. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.04859.x. PMC 2780359. PMID 19673819.
  35. ^ Van Der Meulen, Ineke; Van De Sandt-Koenderman, Mieke W. M. E.; Heijenbrok, Majanka H.; Visch-Brink, Evy; Ribbers, Gerard M. (November 1, 2016). "Melodic Intonation Therapy in Chronic Aphasia: Evidence from a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 10: 533. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2016.00533. PMC 5088197. PMID 27847473.
  36. ^ Dyukova, G. M.; Glozman, Zh. M.; Titova, E. Yu.; Kriushev, E. S.; Gamaleya, A. A. (June 8, 2010). "Speech Disorders in Right-Hemisphere Stroke". Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology. 40 (6): 593–602. doi:10.1007/s11055-010-9301-9. PMID 20532830. S2CID 28786230.
  37. ^ a b c d Zumbansen, Anna; Peretz, Isabelle; Hébert, Sylvie (2014). "Melodic Intonation Therapy: Back to Basics for Future Research". Frontiers in Neurology. 5: 7. doi:10.3389/fneur.2014.00007. PMC 3904283. PMID 24478754.
  38. ^ Belin, P.; Zilbovicius, M.; Remy, Ph.; Francois, C.; Guillaume, S.; Chain, F.; Rancurel, G.; Samson, Y. (December 1, 1996). "Recovery from nonfluent aphasia after melodic intonation therapy: A PET study". Neurology. 47 (6): 1504–1511. doi:10.1212/wnl.47.6.1504. PMID 8960735. S2CID 29742900.
  39. ^ Bradt, Joke; Dileo, Cheryl; Myers-Coffman, Katherine; Biondo, Jacelyn (October 12, 2021). "Music interventions for improving psychological and physical outcomes in people with cancer". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021 (10): CD006911. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD006911.pub4. ISSN 1469-493X. PMC 8510511. PMID 34637527.
  40. ^ a b Tseng, Ping-Tao (January 26, 2016). "Significant treatment effect of adjunct music therapy to standard treatment on the positive, negative, and mood symptoms of schizophrenic patients: a meta-analysis". BMC Psychiatry. 16: 16. doi:10.1186/s12888-016-0718-8. PMC 4728768. PMID 26812906.
  41. ^ a b c Geretsegger M, Mössler KA, Bieleninik Ł, Chen XJ, Heldal TO, Gold C (May 2017). "Music therapy for people with schizophrenia and schizophrenia-like disorders". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2017 (5): CD004025. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD004025.pub4. PMC 6481900. PMID 28553702.
  42. ^ Landis-Shack N, Heinz AJ, Bonn-Miller MO (2017). "Music Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress in Adults: A Theoretical Review". Psychomusicology. 27 (4): 334–342. doi:10.1037/pmu0000192. PMC 5744879. PMID 29290641.
  43. ^ a b Tang, Qishou; Huang, Zhaohui; Zhou, Huan; Ye, Peijie (2020). "Effects of music therapy on depression: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials". PLOS ONE. 15 (11): e0240862. Bibcode:2020PLoSO..1540862T. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0240862. PMC 7673528. PMID 33206656.
  44. ^ Kwan, Chi Kin; Clift, Stephen (March 15, 2018). "Exploring the processes of change facilitated by musical activities on mental wellness". Nordic Journal of Music Therapy. 27 (2): 142–157. doi:10.1080/08098131.2017.1363808. ISSN 0809-8131. S2CID 148824220.
  45. ^ a b Darnley-Smith, Rachel (February 18, 2003). Music Therapy (1st ed.). SAGE Publications, Limited. p. 30. ISBN 9781847876317.
  46. ^ Dalton, Thomas A.; Krout, Robert E. (January 1, 2005). "Development of the Grief Process Scale through music therapy songwriting with bereaved adolescents". The Arts in Psychotherapy. 32 (2): 131–143. doi:10.1016/j.aip.2005.02.002. ISSN 0197-4556.
  47. ^ Cochrane, A. L. (1972). Effectiveness and Efficiency: Random Reflections on Health Services. London: Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust.
  48. ^ Davis, W. B., Gfeller, K. E., & Thaut, M. H. An Introduction to Music Therapy Theory and Practice: The Music Therapy Treatment Process.. 3rd ed. Silver Spring, Maryland, 2008.
  49. ^ Bruscia, Kenneth E. Defining Music Therapy. Gilsum, NH: Barcelona Publishers, 1998.
  50. ^ Botello, R. K., & Krout, R. E. (2008). "Music therapy assessment of automatic thoughts: Developing a cognitive behavioral application of improvisation to assess couple communication". Music Therapy Perspectives, 26(1), 51–55.
  51. ^ Freed, B. S. (1987). "Songwriting with the chemically dependent". Music Therapy Perspectives, 4, 13–18.
  52. ^ Grocke, D.E.; Wigram, T. (2007). Receptive Methods in Music Therapy: Techniques and Clinical Applications for Music Therapy Clinicians, Educators and Students. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 978-1-84310-413-1. Retrieved November 27, 2021. [page needed]
  53. ^ Li, Hui-Chi; Wang, Hsiu-Hung; Chou, Fan-Hao; Chen, Kuei-Min (January 2015). "The Effect of Music Therapy on Cognitive Functioning Among Older Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis". Journal of the American Medical Directors Association. 16 (1): 71–77. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2014.10.004. PMID 25458447.
  54. ^ Stanczyk, Malgorzata Monika (September 2011). "Music therapy in supportive cancer care". Reports of Practical Oncology & Radiotherapy. 16 (5): 170–72. doi:10.1016/j.rpor.2011.04.005. PMC 3863265. PMID 24376975.
  55. ^ Uedo, Noriya; Ishikawa, Hideki (2004). "Reduction in salivary cortisol level by music therapy during colonoscopic examination". Hepato-Gastroenterology. 51. Morimoto, K., Ishihara, R., Narahara, R., Akedo, I., Ioka, T., Kaji, I., Fukuda, S.: 463–465.
  56. ^ Azad, Sonia (May 7, 2018). "Harmonica being studied in COPD patients". WFAA. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  57. ^ Sekiya, Makoto (January 9, 2014). "Swedish music therapy method for aged strikes chord in nursing homes". The Japan Times. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  58. ^ a b c d e Bruscia, Kenneth E. (2014). Defining Music Therapy (3 ed.). University Park, IL: Barcelona Publishers. ISBN 9781937440589.
  59. ^ a b c d Wheeler, Barbara L. (2017). "Part II: Orientations and approaches". Music Therapy Handbook. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 129–132. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Knight, Andrew; LaGasse, Blythe; Clair, Alicia (2018). Music therapy: An introduction to the profession. Silver Spring, MD: The American Music Therapy Association. ISBN 978-1-884914-35-5.
  61. ^ Stige, Brynjulf (2017). "Community Music Therapy". In Wheeler, Barbara L. (ed.). Music Therapy Handbook. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 233–245. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  62. ^ Hurt-Thaut, Corene P.; Johnson, Sarah B. (2017). "Neurologic Music Therapy". In Wheeler, Barbara L. (ed.). Handbook of Music Therapy. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 220–232. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  63. ^ Isenberg, Connie (2017). "Psychodynamic Approaches". In Wheeler, Barbara L. (ed.). Music Therapy Handbook. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 133–147. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  64. ^ Hanser, Susan (2017). "Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches". In Wheeler, Barbara L. (ed.). Music Therapy Handbook. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 161–171. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  65. ^ Abrams, Brian (2017). "Humanistic Approaches". In Wheeler, Barbara L. (ed.). Music Therapy Handbook. New York: The Guilford Press. pp. 148–160. ISBN 978-1-4625-2972-8.
  66. ^ Gfeller, Kate E.; Thaut, Michael H. (2008). "Music therapy in the treatment of behavioral-emotional disorders". In Davis, William B.; Gfeller, Kate E.; Thaut, Michael H. (eds.). Music Therapy: An introduction to theory and practice (3rd ed.). Silver Spring, MD: The American Music Therapy Association. pp. 209–246. ISBN 978-1884914201.
  67. ^ "Training in 2021". Avalon GIM Training Australia. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  68. ^ Appalachian State University (2020). "Bonny Method Level 1 Training". Hayes School of Music. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  69. ^ a b Bonny, Helen L. (April 2001). "Music psychotherapy: guided imagery and music". Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy. 10 (3). doi:10.15845/voices.v10i3.568. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  70. ^ Aigen, Kenneth (2005). Being in Music: Foundations of Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy. Barcelona Publishers. ISBN 9781891278372.
  71. ^ Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Centre
  72. ^ "History – Nordoff-Robbins Center for Music Therapy – NYU Steinhardt". steinhardt.nyu.edu. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  73. ^ Temple University. (2018). Models of Music Psychotherapy [PDF].
  74. ^ "Nordoff-Robbins". NYU Steinhardt. New York University. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  75. ^ a b c Voigt, Melanie (November 2003). "Orff music therapy: an overview". Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy. 3 (3). doi:10.15845/voices.v3i3.134. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  76. ^ Bakan, Michael (2012). World Music Traditions and Transformations. New York: McGraw Hill. p. 10. ISBN 978-0073526645.
  77. ^ Whitehead-Pleaux, Annette; Tan, Xeuli (2017). "Preface". In Whitehead-Pleaux, Annette; Tan, Xueli (eds.). Cultural intersections in music therapy: Music, health, and the person. Dallas, TX: Barcelona Publishers. pp. xi–xii. ISBN 9781937440978.
  78. ^ Whitehead-Pleaux, Annette (2017). "Discrimination and oppression". In Whitehead-Pleaux, Annette; Tan, Xeuli (eds.). Cultural intersections in music therapy: Music, health, and the person. Dallas, Tx: Barcelona Publishers. pp. 3–10. ISBN 9781937440978.
  79. ^ Hahna, Nicole D. (2017). "Reflecting on personal bias". In Whitehead-Pleaux, Annette; Tan, Xueli (eds.). Cultural intersections in music therapy: Music, health, and the person. Dallas, TX: Barcelona Publishers. pp. 23–33. ISBN 9781937440978.
  80. ^ Sue, Derald Wing; Torino, Gina C. (2005). "Racial-cultural competence: Awareness, knowledge, and skills". In Carter, Robert T. (ed.). Handbook of racial-cultural psychology and counseling: Training and practice. Vol. 2. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 3–18. ISBN 0-471-38629-4.
  81. ^ Stone, Ruth (2005). Music in West Africa : Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. New York: Oxford University.[page needed]
  82. ^ Stuart-Reid, Annaliese and John. "Sound Healing- Ancient Sounds". Token Rock. TokenRock. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  83. ^
  84. ^ Sayers, Andrew (2001) [2001]. Australian Art (Oxford History of Art) (paperback). Oxford University Press, USA (published July 19, 2001). p. 19. ISBN 978-0192842145.
  85. ^ George Chaloupka, Journey in Time, p. 189.
  86. ^ Voices: Fran Herman, Music Therapist in Canada for over 50 years
  87. ^ Canadian Encyclopedia: Alfred Rosé
  88. ^ Canadian Encyclopedia: Music Therapy
  89. ^
  90. ^ 赵小明 (2018). 本土化音乐治疗与实操 (in Chinese). Bei fang wen yi chu ban she. ISBN 978-7-5317-4243-2. OCLC 1103761472.
  91. ^ Deutsche Musiktherapeutische Gesellschaft [German Music Therapy Society]. "Was ist Musiktherapie?" [What is music therapy?]. Musiktherapie. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
  92. ^ Cook, Patricia; Cook, Pat (1997). Sacred Music Therapy in North India (Vol. 39 ed.). VWB. pp. 61–83. ISBN 978-3-86135-704-9. JSTOR 41699130.
  93. ^ "Index of /".
  94. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
  95. ^ Suvarna Nalapat (2008). Nadalayasindhu (Ragachikitsamritham) (in Malayalam). Kottayam: D C Books. ISBN 978-81-264-1962-3.
  96. ^ "Grand Unification for World Peace; Music THerapy for Integrating Healthcare PDF | Alternative Medicine | Medicine".
  97. ^ Music Therapy in Healthcare. The popular Publications Chennai Apollo 2007. Dr Mythili Thirumalach7ary http://www.emusictherapy.com
  98. ^ Suvarna Nalapat (2008). Music Therapy in Management, Education and Administration. New Delhi: Readworthy Publications. ISBN 978-81-89973-72-8.
  99. ^ Ragachikitsa (Music Therapy). Readworthy Publication. New Delhi. 2008. Dr Mythili Thirumalachary. In Indian Context. ISBN 978-81-89973-69-8
  100. ^ . Archived from the original on October 21, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  101. ^ . www.themusictherapytrust.com. Archived from the original on October 21, 2013. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  102. ^ . Archived from the original on February 4, 2015. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  103. ^ . Archived from the original on December 17, 2014. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  104. ^ "Nordic Journal of Music Therapy". Taylor & Francis.
  105. ^ "Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy".
  106. ^ A luede, Charles Onomudo (2010). "Some Reflections on the Future of Music Therapy in Nigeria" (PDF). ajol.info/. Retrieved March 31, 2019.
  107. ^ a b c Pavlicevic, Mercédès (2001). "Music Therapy in South Africa: Compromise or Synthesis?". Voices. 1 (1). doi:10.15845/voices.v1i1.
  108. ^ University of Pretoria (2020). "Commemorating Mercédès Pavlicevic". Online World Congress of Music Therapy – The Polyrhythms of Music Therapy | Development of Music Therapy in South Africa. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
  109. ^ Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy (June 5, 2018). "Remembering Mercédès Pavlicevic". Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
  110. ^ South African Music Therapy Association. "Home". South African Music Therapy Association. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  111. ^ World Federation of Music Therapy. "World Congress South Africa". WFMT Events. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  112. ^ a b c American Music Therapy Association. "Education and Careers". Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  113. ^ American Music Therapy Association. "How to find a music therapist". American Music Therapy Association. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  114. ^ Australian Music Therapy Association. "What is an RMT?". Australian Music Therapy Association. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  115. ^ NJ Association for Music Therapy. "Qualifications to practice". Advocacy. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  116. ^ PolicyEngage, LLC. "Virginia SB633 Music therapy; definition of music therapist, licensure [2019/20]". TrackBill. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  117. ^ a b Certification Board for Music Therapists (June 8, 2022). "State Licensure". Certification Board for Music Therapists. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
  118. ^ a b c American Music Therapy Association. "National Overview of State Recognition". State Advocacy. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  119. ^ New York State Education Department, Office of the Professions. . Mental Health Practitioners: Creative Arts Therapy License Requirements. Archived from the original on September 8, 2022. Retrieved November 1, 2020.
  120. ^ Certification Board for Music Therapists. "Recertification". Certificants. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  121. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Davis, William B.; Gfeller, Kate E. (2008). "Music therapy: Historical perspective". In Davis, William B.; Gfeller, Kate E.; Thaut, Michael H. (eds.). Music therapy: An introduction to theory and practice (3rd ed.). Silver Spring, MD: The American Music Therapy Association. pp. 17–39. ISBN 978-1884914201.
  122. ^ a b Degmecic D, Požgain I, Filakovic P (2005). "Music as Therapy". International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music. 36 (2): 290.
  123. ^ a b Jennifer, Springer (2013). A Historical Review of Music Therapy and the Department of Veterans Affairs (Thesis). Molloy College.
  124. ^ American Music Therapy Association. "Music therapy historical review". About music therapy & AMTA. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  125. ^ "Music Therapy Group Outlines Unusual Program". The Miami News. July 9, 1950. p. 27. Retrieved March 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  126. ^ American Music Therapy Association. "History of Music Therapy". History of Music Therapy. Retrieved November 1, 2020.
  127. ^ "British Association for Music Therapy".
  128. ^ . Archived from the original on September 27, 2006. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  129. ^ Talwar N, Crawford MJ, Maratos A, Nur U, McDermott O, Procter S (November 2006). "Music therapy for in-patients with schizophrenia: exploratory randomised controlled trial". The British Journal of Psychiatry. 189 (5): 405–9. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.105.015073. PMID 17077429. Music therapy may provide a means of improving mental health among people with schizophrenia, but its effects in acute psychoses have not been explored
  130. ^ "Music therapy may improve schizophrenia symptoms", Faculty of Medicine News, Imperial College, London.
  131. ^ "Technical Bulletin 187: Music in Reconditioning in American Service Forces Convalescent and General Hospitals". War Department Technical Bulletin (TB Med) 187 (1945): 1–11.
  132. ^ Rorke MA (1996). "Music and the Wounded of World War II". Journal of Music Therapy. 33 (3): 189–207. doi:10.1093/jmt/33.3.189.
  133. ^ Wheeler, E.J.; I. K. Funk; W.S. Woods; A.S. Draper; and W.J. Funk. "Columbia University to Heal Wounded by Music". Literary Digest (1919): 59–62.
  134. ^ Amir, Dorit (2004). "Giving Trauma a Voice: The Role of Improvisational Music Therapy in Exposing, Dealing with and Healing a Traumatic Experience of Sexual Abuse". Music Therapy Perspectives. 22 (2): 96–103. doi:10.1093/mtp/22.2.96.
  135. ^ a b "Music Therapy and Military Populations". American Music Therapy Association, 2014.
  136. ^ "American Music Therapy Association | American Music Therapy Association (AMTA)". www.musictherapy.org. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  137. ^ a b "Music Therapy and Military Populations | American Music Therapy Association (AMTA)". www.musictherapy.org. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  138. ^ "Music therapy helping marines with TBI's". KGTV. June 12, 2018. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  139. ^ "Healing through music". U.S. Air Force. November 20, 2015. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  140. ^ Andrews, Evan (August 8, 2023). "What is the oldest known piece of music?". The History Channel.
  141. ^ Misic, P.; Arandjelovic, D.; Stanojkovic, S.; Vladejic, S.; Mladenovic, J. (2010). "Music Therapy". European Psychiatry. 25 (Supplement 1): 839. doi:10.1016/s0924-9338(10)70830-0. S2CID 74635824.
  142. ^ Howells, John G.; Osborn, M. Livia (1984). A reference companion to the history of abnormal psychology. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-24261-8. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  143. ^ Antrim, Doron K. (2006). "Music Therapy". The Musical Quarterly. 30 (4): 409–420. doi:10.1093/mq/xxx.4.409.
  144. ^ Antrim, Doron K. (2006). "Music Therapy". The Musical Quarterly. 30 (4): 410. doi:10.1093/mq/xxx.4.409.
  145. ^ Haque, Amber (2004). "Psychology from Islamic Perspective: Contributions of Early Muslim Scholars and Challenges to Contemporary Muslim Psychologists". Journal of Religion and Health. 43 (4): 357–377 [363]. doi:10.1007/s10943-004-4302-z. S2CID 38740431.
  146. ^ Penelope Gouk, 2004, « Raising Spirits and Restoring Souls. Early Modern Medical Explanations for Music's Effects », in Veit Erlmann (dir.), Hearing Cultures. Essays on Sound, Listening and Modernity, Oxford / New York, Berg Publishers, p. 101
  147. ^ cf. The Anatomy of Melancholy, Robert Burton, subsection 3, on and after line 3480, "Music a Remedy": "But to leave all declamatory speeches in praise [3481]of divine music, I will confine myself to my proper subject: besides that excellent power it hath to expel many other diseases, it is a sovereign remedy against [3482] despair and melancholy, and will drive away the devil himself. Canus, a Rhodian fiddler, in [3483] Philostratus, when Apollonius was inquisitive to know what he could do with his pipe, told him, 'That he would make a melancholy man merry, and him that was merry much merrier than before, a lover more enamoured, a religious man more devout.' Ismenias the Theban, [3484] Chiron the centaur, is said to have cured this and many other diseases by music alone: as now they do those, saith [3485] Bodine, that are troubled with St. Vitus's Bedlam dance."
  148. ^ "Humanities are the Hormones: A Tarantella Comes to Newfoundland. What should we do about it?" February 15, 2015, at the Wayback Machine by Dr. John Crellin, MUNMED, newsletter of the Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1996.
  149. ^ Aung SK, Lee MH (2004). "Music, Sounds, Medicine, and Meditation: An Integrative Approach to the Healing Arts". Alternative & Complementary Therapies. 10 (5): 266–270. doi:10.1089/act.2004.10.266.
  150. ^ Gouk P (2004). Erlmann (ed.). Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening and Modernity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 87–105.
  151. ^ Kennaway, James (2010). "From Sensibility to Pathology: The Origins of the Idea of Nervous Music around 1800". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 65 (3): 396–426. doi:10.1093/jhmas/jrq004. PMC 3935440. PMID 20219729.
  152. ^ Reid, Amanda (2020). "Social Utility of Music: A Case For A Copyright Exemption For Therapeutic Uses". Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy. 30: 1–44. SSRN 3733009.
  153. ^ Amanda, Reid; Nicolla, Sydney K. (2022). "Exploring Music Therapists' Experiences With and Perceptions About Copyrighted Music: A Thematic Analysis". Journal of Music Therapy. 59 (3): 269–306. doi:10.1093/jmt/thac007. PMID 35932195. SSRN 4185186.
  154. ^ Reid, Amanda; Kresovich, Alex (2021). "Copyright as a Barrier to Music Therapy Telehealth Interventions: Qualitative Interview Study". JMIR Formative Research. 5 (8): e28383. doi:10.2196/28383. PMC 8366753. PMID 34319241. SSRN 3895196.
  155. ^ Reid, Amanda; Miño, Pablo (2021). "When Therapy Goes Public: Copyright Gatekeepers and Sharing Therapeutic Artifacts on Social Media". International Journal of Communication. 15: 950–969. SSRN 3778848.

Bibliography

  • American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed., text rev.). Washington, D.C.: Author.
  • Gibson, David (2018). The Complete Guide to Sound Healing (2nd ed.), Sound of Light.

Goodman,K.D.(2011) Music therapy education and training: From theory to practice . Charles C . Thomas

  • K.D.Goodman,Ed. (2015) International perspectives in music therapy education and training. Charles C Thomas
  • K.D. Goodman (Ed.) (2023) Developing issues in world music therapy education and training: A plurality of views. Charles C Thomas.
  • Hilliard, R. E. (2001). The effects of music therapy-based bereavement groups on mood and behavior of grieving children: A pilot study. Journal of Music Therapy, 38(4), 291–306.
  • Hilliard, R. E. (2007). The effects of orff-based music therapy and social work groups on childhood grief symptoms and behaviors. Journal of Music Therapy, 44(2), 123–38.
  • Jones, J. D. (2005). A comparison of songwriting and lyric analysis techniques to evoke emotional change in a single session with people who are chemically dependent, journal of Music Therapy, 42, 94–110.
  • Krout, R. E. (2005). Applications of music therapist-composed songs in creating participant connections and facilitating goals and rituals during one-time bereavement support groups and programs. Music Therapy Perspectives, 23(2), 118–128.
  • Lindenfelser, K. J., Grocke, D., & McFerran, K. (2008). Bereaved parents' experiences of music therapy with their terminally ill child. Journal of Music Therapy, 45(3), 330–48.
  • Rosner, R, Kruse, J., & Hagl, M. (2010). A meta‐analysis of interventions for bereaved children and adolescents. Death Studies, 34(2), 99 – 136.
  • Schwantes, M., Wigram, T., McKinney, C., Lipscomb, A., & Richards, C. (2011). The Mexican corrido and its use in a music therapy bereavement group. The Australian Journal of Music Therapy, 22, 2–20.
  • Silverman, M. J. (2008). Quantitative comparison of cognitive behavioral therapy and music therapy research: A methodological best-practices analysis to guide future investigation for adult psychiatric patients. Journal of Music Therapy, 45(4), 457–506.
  • Silverman, M. J. (2009). The use of lyric analysis interventions in contemporary psychiatric music therapy: Descriptive results of songs and objectives for clinical practice. Music Therapy Perspectives, 27(1), 55–61.
  • Silverman, M. J., & Marcionetti, M. J. (2004). Immediate effects of a single music therapy intervention on persons who are severely mentally ill. Arts in Psychotherapy, 31, 291–301.
  • Valentino, R. E. (2006). Attitudes towards cross-cultural empathy in music therapy. Music Therapy Perspectives, 24(2), 108–114.
  • Whitehead-Pleaux, A. M., Baryza, M.J., & Sheridan, R.L. (2007). Exploring the effects of music therapy on pediatric pain: phase 1. The Journal of Music Therapy, 44(3), 217–41.

Further reading

  • Aldridge, David ( 2000). Music Therapy in Dementia Care, London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 1853027766
  • Boso M, Politi P, Barale F, Enzo E (2006). "Neurophysiology and neurobiology of the musical experience". Functional Neurology. 21 (4): 187–91. PMID 17367577.
  • Boynton, Dori, compiler (1991). Lady Boynton's "New Age" Dossiers: a Serendipitous Digest of News and Articles on Trends in Modern Day Mysticism and Decadence. New Port Richey, Flor.: Lady D. Boynton. 2 vol. N.B.: Anthology of reprinted articles, pamphlets, etc. on New Age aspects of speculation in psychology, philosophy, music (especially music therapy), religion, sexuality, etc.
  • Bruscia, Kenneth E. . Boyer College of Music and Dance, , Temple University, 1993.
  • Bunt, Leslie; Stige, Brynjulf (2014). Music Therapy: An Art Beyond Words. (Second edition.) London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415450683.
  • Davis, William B., Kate E. Gfeller, and Michael H. Thaut (2008). An Introduction to Music Therapy: Theory and Practice. Third ed. Silver Springs, MD: American Music Therapy Association. ISBN 978-1884914201
  • Erlmann, Veit (ed.) Hearing Cultures. Essays on Sound, Listening, and Modernity, New York: Berg Publishers, 2004. Cf. especially Chapter 5, "Raising Spirits and Restoring Souls".
  • Gibson, David (2018). The Complete Guide to Sound Healing. (2nd ed.) Sound of Light.
  • Gold, C., Heldal, T.O., Dahle, T., Wigram, T. (2006). "Music therapy for schizophrenia or schizophrenia-like illnesses", Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Issue 4.
  • Goodman, K.D. (2011). Music Therapy Education and Training: From Theory to Practice. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. ISBN 978-0398086091.
  • Harbert, Wilhelmina K., (1947). "Some principles, practices and techniques in musical therapy". University of the Pacific Dissertations.
  • Hart, Hugh. (March 23, 2008) The New York Times "A Season of Song, Dance and Autism". Section: AR; p. 20.
  • La Musicothérapie: thémathèque. Montréal, Bibliothèque du personnel, Hôpital Rivière-des-Prairies, 1978.
  • Levinge, Alison (2015). The Music of Being: Music Therapy, Winnicott and the School of Object Relations. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 978-1849055765.
  • Marcello Sorce Keller, "Some Ethnomusicological Considerations about Magic and the Therapeutic Uses of Music", International Journal of Music Education, 8/2 (1986), 13–16.
  • Owens, Melissa (December 2014). "Remembering through Music: Music Therapy and Dementia". Age in Action. 29 (3): 1–5.
  • Pellizzari, Patricia y colaboradores: Flavia Kinisberg, Germán Tuñon, Candela Brusco, Diego Patles, Vanesa Menendez, Julieta Villegas, y Emmanuel Barrenechea (2011). "Crear Salud", aportes de la Musicoterapia preventiva-comunitaria. Patricia Pellizzari Ediciones. Buenos Aires
  • Ruud, Even (2010). Music Therapy: A Perspective from the Humanities. Barcelona Publishers. ISBN 978-1-891278-54-9.
  • Tuet, R.W.K.; Lam, L.C.W. (2006). . Hong Kong Journal of Psychiatry. 16 (3). Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  • Wheeler, Barbara L. (2015). Music Therapy Research: Quantitative And Qualitative Perspectives. Barcelona: Barcelona Publishers (NH). ISBN 978-1891278266.
  • Whipple J (July 2004). "Music in intervention for children and adolescents with autism: a meta-analysis". Journal of Music Therapy. 41 (2): 90–106. doi:10.1093/jmt/41.2.90. PMID 15307805. S2CID 38696989.
  • Wigram, Tony (2000). "A Method of Music Therapy Assessment for the Diagnosis of Autism and Communication Disorders in Children". Music Therapy Perspectives. 18 (1): 13–22. doi:10.1093/mtp/18.1.13.
  • Vladimir Simosko. Is Rock Music Harmful? Winnipeg: 1987 OCLC 757688822 [ISBN unspecified]
  • Vladimir Simosko. Jung, Music, and Music Therapy: Prepared on the Occasion of the "C.G. Jung and the Humanities" Colloquium, 1987. Winnipeg: The Colloqium OCLC 184852242 [ISBN unspecified]
  • Vomberg, Elizabeth. Music for the Physically Disabled Child: a Bibliography. Toronto: 1978. OCLC 316014578 [ISBN unspecified]

External links

music, therapy, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, citations, text, formatting, some, headings, need, cleaned, please, help, improve, this, article, march, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Citations text formatting and some headings need to be cleaned up Please help improve this article if you can March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music therapy an allied health profession is the clinical and evidence based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a credentialed professional who has completed an approved music therapy program 1 It is also a vocation involving a deep commitment to music and the desire to use it as a medium to help others Although music therapy has only been established as a profession relatively recently the connection between music and therapy is not new 2 Music therapyPower of Music by Louis Gallait A brother and sister resting before an old tomb The brother is attempting to comfort his sibling by playing the violin and she has fallen into a deep sleep oblivious of all grief mental and physical ICD 9 CM93 84MeSHD009147 edit on Wikidata Music therapy is a broad field Music therapists use music based experiences to address client needs in one or more domains of human functioning cognitive academic emotional psychological behavioral communication social physiological sensory motor pain neurological and other physical systems spiritual aesthetics 3 4 5 Music experiences are strategically designed to use the elements of music for therapeutic effects including melody harmony key mode meter rhythm pitch range duration timbre form texture and instrumentation 6 7 8 Some common music therapy practices include developmental work communication motor skills etc with individuals with special needs songwriting and listening in reminiscence orientation work with the elderly processing and relaxation work and rhythmic entrainment for physical rehabilitation in stroke survivors Music therapy is used in medical hospitals cancer centers schools alcohol and drug recovery programs psychiatric hospitals nursing homes and correctional facilities 1 Music therapy is distinctive from Musopathy which relies on a more generic and non cultural approach based on neural physical and other responses to the fundamental aspects of sound 9 Music therapy might also be described as Sound Healing Extensive studies have been made with this description 10 11 Music therapy aims to provide physical and mental benefit Music therapists use their techniques to help their patients in many areas ranging from stress relief before and after surgeries to neuropathologies such as Alzheimer s disease Studies on patients diagnosed with mental health disorders such as anxiety depression and schizophrenia have associated some improvements in mental health after music therapy 12 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence NICE have claimed that music therapy is an effective method in helping individuals experiencing mental health issues and more should be done to offer those in need this type of help 13 Contents 1 Uses 1 1 Children and adolescents 1 1 1 Methods 1 1 2 Assessment 1 2 Premature infants 1 3 Medical disorders 1 3 1 Autism 1 3 2 Heart disease 1 3 3 Stroke 1 3 4 Dementia 1 3 5 Aphasia 1 3 6 Cancer 1 4 Mental health 1 5 Bereavement 1 6 Empirical evidence 1 7 Interventions 2 Types of music therapy 2 1 Receptive 2 2 Active 3 Models and approaches 3 1 The Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music 3 2 Nordoff Robbins 3 3 Orff 4 Cultural aspects 4 1 Cultural considerations in music therapy services education and research 5 Usage by region 5 1 African continent 5 2 Australia 5 2 1 Music for healing in ancient times 5 2 2 Music Therapy in modern times An allied health profession 5 3 Canada 5 3 1 History ca1940 present 5 4 China 5 5 Germany 5 6 India 5 7 Lebanon 5 8 Norway 5 9 Nigeria 5 10 South Africa 5 11 United States 5 11 1 Credential 5 11 2 Professional Association 5 11 3 Education 5 11 4 Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy 5 11 5 History c 1900 present 5 12 United Kingdom 6 Military active duty veterans family members 6 1 History 6 2 Methods 6 3 Programs 7 History 7 1 Western cultures 7 1 1 Music and healing 7 1 2 Music therapy 17th 19th century 7 1 3 Music therapy 1900 c 1940 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksUsesChildren and adolescents Music therapy may be suggested for adolescent populations to help manage disorders usually diagnosed in adolescence such as mood anxiety disorders and eating disorders or inappropriate behaviors including suicide attempts withdrawal from family social isolation from peers aggression running away and substance abuse 14 15 Goals in treating adolescents with music therapy especially for those at high risk often include increased recognition and awareness of emotions and moods improved decision making skills opportunities for creative self expression decreased anxiety increased self confidence improved self esteem and better listening skills 16 There is some evidence that when combined with other types of rehabilitation music therapy may contribute to the success rate of sensorimotor cognitive and communicative rehabilitation 17 For children and adolescents with major depressive or anxiety disorders there is moderate to low quality evidence that music therapy added to the standard treatment may reduce internalizing symptoms and may be more effective than treatment as usual without music therapy 18 19 Methods Among adolescents group meetings and individual sessions are the main methods for music therapy Both methods may include listening to music discussing concerning moods and emotions in or toward music analyzing the meanings of specific songs writing lyrics composing or performing music and musical improvisation 15 Private individual sessions can provide personal attention and are most effective when using music preferred by the patient Using music that adolescents can relate to or connect with can help adolescent patients view the therapist as safe and trustworthy and to engage in therapy with less resistance 15 Music therapy conducted in groups allows adolescent individuals to feel a sense of belonging express their opinions learn how to socialize and verbalize appropriately with peers improve compromising skills and develop tolerance and empathy 14 Group sessions that emphasize cooperation and cohesion can be effective in working with adolescents 20 Music therapy intervention programs typically include about 18 sessions of treatment The achievement of a physical rehabilitation goal relies on the child s existing motivation and feelings towards music and their commitment to engage in meaningful rewarding efforts Regaining full functioning also confides in the prognosis of recovery the condition of the client and the environmental resources available Both techniques use systematic processes where the therapists assist the client by using musical experiences and connections that collaborate as a dynamic force of change toward rehabilitation 21 Assessment Assessment includes obtaining a full medical history musical ability to duplicate a melody or identify changes in rhythm etc and non musical functioning social physical motor emotional etc 22 23 Premature infants Premature infants are those born at 37 weeks after conception or earlier They are subject to numerous health risks such as abnormal breathing patterns decreased body fat and muscle tissue as well as feeding issues The coordination for sucking and breathing is often not fully developed making feeding a challenge Offering musical therapy to premature infants while they are in the neonatal intensive care unit NICU aims to both mask unwanted auditory stimuli stimulate infant development and promote a calm environment for families While there are no reported adverse effects from music therapy the evidence supporting music therapy s beneficial effects for infants is weak as many of the clinical trials that have been performed either had mixed results or were poorly designed 24 There is no strong evidence to suggest that music therapy improves an infant s oxygen therapy improves sucking or improves development when compared to usual care 24 There is some weaker evidence that music therapy may decrease an infants heart rate 24 There is no evidence to indicate that music therapy reduces anxiety in parents of preterm infants in the NICU or information to understand what type of music therapy may be more beneficial or how for how long 24 Medical disorders Music may both motivate and provide a sense of distraction 21 Rhythmic stimuli has been found to help balance training for those with a brain injury 21 Singing is a form of rehabilitation for neurological impairments Neurological impairments following a brain injury can be in the form of apraxia loss to perform purposeful movements dysarthria muscle control disturbances due to damage of the central nervous system aphasia defect in expression causing distorted speech or language comprehension Singing training has been found to improve lung speech clarity and coordination of speech muscles thus accelerating rehabilitation of such neurological impairments For example melodic intonation therapy is the practice of communicating with others by singing to enhance speech or increase speech production by promoting socialization and emotional expression 21 Autism Music may help people with autism hone their motor and attention skills as well as healthy neurodevelopment of socio communication and interaction skills Music therapy may also contribute to improved selective attention speech production and language processing and acquisition in people with autism 25 Music therapy may benefit the family as a whole Some family members of children with autism claim that music therapy sessions have allowed their child to interact more with the family and the world Music therapy is also beneficial in that it gives children an outlet to use outside of the sessions Some children after participating in music therapy may want to keep making music long after the sessions end 26 Heart disease Listening to music may improve heart rate respiratory rate and blood pressure in those with coronary heart disease CHD 27 Stroke Music may be a useful tool in the recovery of motor skills 28 Dementia Main article Music therapy for Alzheimer s disease This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Music therapy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Like many of the other disorders mentioned some of the most common significant effects of the disorder can be seen in social behaviors leading to improvements in interaction conversation and other such skills A study of over 330 subjects showed that music therapy produces highly significant improvements in social behaviors overt behaviors like wandering and restlessness reductions in agitated behaviors and improvements to cognitive defects measured with reality orientation and face recognition tests The effectiveness of the treatment seems to be strongly dependent on the patient and the quality and length of treatment 29 A group of adults with dementia participated in group music therapy 29 In the group these adults engaged in singing drumming improvisation and movement Each of these activities engaged the adults in different ways The singing aided with memory as these adults improved memorization skills in by taking out specific words in the chorus of a song and by repeating phrases back to the music therapist when the therapist sang a phrase of a song to them Drumming led to increased socialization of the group as it allowed the patients collaborate to create particular rhythms Improvisation allowed the patients to get out of their comfort zone and taught them how to better deal with anxiety Lastly movement with either one arm or two increased social interaction between the patients 29 Another meta study examined the proposed neurological mechanisms behind music therapy s effects on these patients citation needed Many authors suspect that music has a soothing effect on the patient by affecting how noise is perceived music renders noise familiar or buffers the patient from overwhelming or extraneous noise in their environment Others suggest that music serves as a sort of mediator for social interactions providing a vessel through which to interact with others without requiring much cognitive load 29 Aphasia Broca s aphasia or non fluent aphasia is a language disorder caused by damage to Broca s area and surrounding regions in the left frontal lobe 30 Those with non fluent aphasia are able to understand language fairly well but they struggle with language production and syntax 31 Main article Music therapy for non fluent aphasia Neurologist Oliver Sacks studied neurological oddities in people trying to understand how the brain works He concluded that people with some type of frontal lobe damage often produced not only severe difficulties with expressive language aphasia but a strange access of musicality with incessant whistling singing and a passionate interest in music For him this was an example of normally suppressed brain functions being released by damage to others 32 Sacks had a genuine interest in trying to help people affected with neurological disorders and other phenomena associated with music and how it can provide access to otherwise unreachable emotional states revivify neurological avenues that have been frozen evoke memories of earlier lost events or states of being and attempts to bring those with neurological disorders back to a time when the world was much richer for them He was a firm believer that music has the power to heal Melodic intonation therapy MIT developed in 1973 by neurological researchers Sparks Helm and Albert is a method used by music therapists and speech language pathologists to help people with communication disorders caused by damage to the left hemisphere of the brain by engaging the singing abilities and possibly engaging language capable regions in the undamaged right hemisphere 33 34 While unable to speak fluently patients with non fluent aphasia are often able to sing words phrases and even sentences they cannot express otherwise 35 MIT harnesses the singing ability of patients with non fluent aphasia as a means to improve their communication Although its exact nature depends on the therapist in general MIT relies on the use of intonation the rising and falling of the voice and rhythm beat speed to train patients to produce phrases verbally 34 In MIT common words and phrases are turned into melodic phrases generally starting with two step sing song patterns and eventually emulating typical speech intonation and rhythmic patterns 33 A therapist will usually begin by introducing an intonation to their patient through humming 34 They will accompany this humming with a rhythm produced by the tapping of the left hand 34 At the same time the therapist will introduce a visual stimuli of the written phrase to be learned 34 The therapist then sings the phrase with the patient and ideally the patient is eventually able to sing the phrase on their own 34 With much repetition and through a process of inner rehearsal practicing internally hearing one s voice singing a patient may eventually be able to produce the phrase verbally without singing 34 As the patient advances in therapy the procedure can be adapted to give them more autonomy and to teach them more complex phrases 34 Through the use of MIT a non fluent aphasic patient can be taught numerous phrases which aid them to communicate and function during daily life The mechanisms of this success are yet to be fully understood It is commonly agreed that while speech is lateralized mostly to the left hemisphere for right handed and most left handed individuals some speech functionality is also distributed in the right hemisphere 36 MIT is thought to stimulate these right language areas through the activation of music processing areas also in the right hemisphere 37 Similarly the rhythmic tapping of the left hand stimulates the right sensorimotor cortex to further engage the right hemisphere in language production 37 Overall by stimulating the right hemisphere during language tasks therapists hope to decrease dependence on the left hemisphere for language production 34 While results are somewhat contradictory studies have in fact found increased right hemispheric activation in non fluent aphasic patients after MIT 37 This change in activation has been interpreted as evidence of decreased dependence on the left hemisphere 37 There is debate however as to whether changes in right hemispheric activation are part of the therapeutic process during after MIT or are simply a side effect of non fluent aphasia 38 In hopes of making MIT more effective researchers are continually studying the mechanisms of MIT and non fluent aphasia Cancer There is tentative evidence that music interventions led by a trained music therapist may have positive effects on psychological and physical outcomes in adults with cancer The effectiveness of music therapy for children with cancer is not known 39 Mental health There is weak evidence to suggest that people with schizophrenia may benefit from the addition of music therapy along with their other standard treatment regieme 40 41 Potential improvements include decreased aggression less hallucinations and delusions social functioning and quality of life of people with schizophrenia or schizophrenia like disorders 40 41 In addition moderate to low quality evidence suggests that music therapy as an addition to standard care improves the global state mental state including negative and general symptoms Further research using standardized music therapy programs and consistent monitoring protocols are necessary to understand the effectiveness of this approach for adults with schizophrenia 41 Music therapy may be a useful tool for helping treat people with post traumatic stress disorder however more rigorous empirical study is required 42 For adults with depressive symptoms there is some weak evidence to suggest that music therapy may help reduce symptoms and recreative music therapy and guided imagery and music being superior to other methods in reducing depressive symptoms 43 In the use of music therapy for adults there is music medicine which is called for listening to prerecorded music as treated like a medicine Music Therapy also uses Receptive music therapy using music assisted relaxation and using images connecting to the music 43 There is some discussion on the process of change facilitated by musical activities on mental wellness Scholars proposed a six dimensional framework which contains emotional psychological social cognitive behavioral and spiritual aspects Through conducting interview sessions with mental health service users with mood disorders anxiety disorders schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders their study showed the relevance of the six dimensional framework 44 Impact of Music Therapy on General Mental HealthMusic therapy has been used to help bring improvements to mental health among people of all age groups It has been used as far back as the 1830s One example of a mental hospital that used music therapy to aid in the healing process of their patients includes the Hanwell Lunatic Asylum This mental hospital provided music and movement sessions and musical performances as well as group and individual music therapy for patients with serious mental illness or emotional problems 45 Two main categories of music therapy were used in this study analytic music therapy and Nordoff Robbins music therapy Analytic music therapy involves both words and music while Nordoff Robbins music therapy places great emphasis on assessing how clients react to music therapy and how the use of this type of therapy can be constantly altered and shifted to allow it to benefit the client the most 45 Bereavement This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Music therapy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The DSM IV TR Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders lists bereavement as a mental health diagnosis when the focus of clinical attention is related to the loss of a loved one and when symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder are present for up to two months Music therapy models have been found to be successful in treating grief and bereavement Rosner Kruse amp Hagl 2010 citation needed In many countries including the United States music therapists do not diagnose therefore diagnosing a bereavement related disorder would not be within their scope of practice Grief Treatment for AdolescentsGrief treatment is very valuable within the adolescent age group Just as adults and the elderly struggle with grief from loss relationship issues job related stress and financial issues so do adolescents also experience grief from disappointments that occur early on in life however different these disappointing life events may be For example many people of adolescent age experience life altering events such as parental divorce trauma from emotional or physical abuse struggles within school and loss If this grief is not acted upon early on through the use of some kind of therapy it can alter the entire course of an adolescent s life In one particular study on the impact of music therapy on grief management within adolescents used songwriting to allow these adolescents to express what they were feeling through lyrics and instrumentals In the article Development of the Grief Process Scale through music therapy songwriting with bereaved adolescents the results of the study demonstrate that in all of the treatment groups combined the mean GPS grief process scale score decreased by 43 46 The use of music therapy songwriting allowed these adolescents to become less overwhelmed with grief and better able to process it as demonstrated by the decrease in mean GPS score Empirical evidence Since 2017 providing evidence based practice is becoming more and more important and music therapy has been continuously critiqued and regulated to provide that desired evidence based practice A number of research studies and meta analyses have been conducted on or included music therapy and all have found that music therapy has at least some promising effects especially when used for the treatment of grief and bereavement The AMTA has largely supported the advancement of music therapy through research that would promote evidenced based practice With the definition of evidence based health care as the conscientious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients or the delivery of health services current best evidence is up to date information from relevant valid research about the effects of different forms of health care the potential for harm from exposure to particular agents the accuracy of diagnostic tests and the predictive power of prognostic factors 47 Both qualitative and quantitative studies have been completed and both have provided evidence to support music therapy in the use of bereavement treatment One study that evaluated a number of treatment approaches found that only music therapy had significant positive outcomes where the others showed little improvement in participants Rosner Kruse amp Hagl 2010 citation needed Furthermore a pilot study which consisted of an experimental and control group examined the effects of music therapy on mood and behaviors in the home and school communities It was found that there was a significant change in grief symptoms and behaviors with the experimental group in the home but conversely found that there was no significant change in the experimental group in the school community despite the fact that mean scores on the Depression Self Rating Index and the Behavior Rating Index decreased Hilliard 2001 citation needed Yet another study completed by Russel Hilliard 2007 looked at the effects of Orff based music therapy and social work groups on childhood grief symptoms and behaviors Using a control group that consisted of wait listed clients and employing the Behavior Rating Index for Children and the bereavement Group Questionnaire for Parents and Guardians as measurement tools it was found that children who were in the music therapy group showed significant improvement in grief symptoms and also showed some improvement in behaviors compared to the control group whereas the social work group also showed significant improvement in both grief and behaviors compared to the control group The study concludes with support for music therapy as a medium from bereavement groups for children Hilliard 2007 citation needed Though there has been research done on music therapy and though the use of it has been evaluated there remain a number of limitations in these studies and further research should be completed before absolute conclusions are made though the results of using music therapy in the treatment have consistently shown to be positive citation needed Music therapy practice is working together with clients through music to promote healthy change Bruscia 1998 The American Music Therapy Association AMTA has defined the practice of music therapy as a behavioral science concerned with changing unhealthy behaviors and replacing them with more adaptive ones through the use of musical stimuli 48 Interventions Though music therapy practice employs a large number of intervention techniques some of the most commonly used interventions include improvisation therapeutic singing therapeutic instrumental music playing music facilitated reminiscence and life review songwriting music facilitated relaxation and lyric analysis While there has been no conclusive research done on the comparison of interventions Jones 2005 Silverman 2008 Silverman amp Marcionetti 2004 citation needed the use of particular interventions is individualized to each client based upon thorough assessment of needs and the effectiveness of treatment may not rely on the type of intervention Silverman 2009 citation needed Improvisation in music therapy allows for clients to make up or alter music as they see fit While improvisation is an intervention in a methodical practice it does allow for some freedom of expression which is what it is often used for Improvisation has several other clinical goals as well which can also be found on the Improvisation in music therapy page such as facilitating verbal and nonverbal communication self exploration creating intimacy teamwork developing creativity and improving cognitive skills 49 Building on these goals Botello and Krout designed a cognitive behavioral application to assess and improve communication in couples 50 Further research is needed before the use of improvisation is conclusively proven to be effective in this application but there were positive signs in this study of its use Singing or playing an instrument is often used to help clients express their thoughts and feelings in a more structured manner than improvisation and can also allow participation with only limited knowledge of music Singing in a group can facilitate a sense of community and can also be used as group ritual to structure a theme of the group or of treatment Krout 2005 citation needed Research that compares types of music therapy intervention has been inconclusive Music Therapists use lyric analysis in a variety of ways but typically lyric analysis is used to facilitate dialogue with clients based on the lyrics which can then lead to discussion that addresses the goals of therapy 51 Types of music therapyTwo fundamental types of music therapy are receptive music therapy and active music therapy also known as expressive music therapy Active music therapy engages clients or patients in the act of making music whereas receptive music therapy guides patients or clients in listening or responding to live or recorded music 52 Either or both can lead to verbal discussions depending on client needs and the therapist s orientation Receptive Receptive music therapy involves listening to recorded or live genres of music such as classical rock jazz and or country music 53 In Receptive music therapy patients are the recipient of the music experience meaning that they are actively listening and responding to the music rather than creating it During music sessions patients participate in song discussion music relaxation and are given the ability to listen to their preferred music genre It can improve mood decrease stress decrease pain enhance relaxation and decrease anxiety this can help with coping skills 54 There is also evidence of biochemical changes e g lowered cortisol levels 55 Active In active music therapy patients engage in some form of music making e g vocalizing rapping chanting singing playing instruments improvising song writing composing or conducting Researchers at Baylor Scott and White Universities are studying the effect of harmonica playing on patients with COPD to determine if it helps improve lung function 56 Another example of active music therapy takes place in a nursing home in Japan therapists teach the elderly how to play easy to use instruments so they can overcome physical difficulties 57 Models and approachesMusic therapist Kenneth Bruscia stated A model is a comprehensive approach to assessment treatment and evaluation that includes theoretical principles clinical indications and contraindications goals methodological guidelines and specifications and the characteristic use of certain procedural sequences and techniques 58 129 In the literature the terms model orientation or approach might be encountered and may have slightly different meanings Regardless music therapists use both psychology models and models specific to music therapy The theories these models are based on include beliefs about human needs causes of distress and how humans grow or heal Models developed specifically for music therapy include analytical music therapy 58 230 59 Benenzon 60 143 144 the Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music GIM 58 230 59 community music therapy 61 Nordoff Robbins music therapy creative music therapy 58 230 59 neurologic music therapy 62 and vocal psychotherapy 59 Psychological orientations used in music therapy include psychodynamic 63 cognitive behavioral 64 humanistic 65 existential 58 230 and the biomedical model 66 The Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music Further information Guided imagery To be trained in this method students are required to be healthcare professionals 67 Some courses are only open to music therapists and mental health professionals 68 Music educator and therapist Helen Lindquist Bonny 1921 2010 developed an approach influenced by humanistic and transpersonal psychological views known as the Bonny Method of guided imagery in music BGIM or GIM Guided imagery refers to a technique used in natural and alternative medicine that involves using mental imagery to help with the physiological and psychological ailments of patients 69 The practitioner often suggests a relaxing and focusing image and through the use of imagination and discussion they aim to find constructive solutions to manage their problems Bonny applied this psychotherapeutic method to the field of music therapy by using music as the means of guiding the patient to a higher state of consciousness where healing and constructive self awareness can take place Music is considered a co therapist because of its importance GIM with children can be used in one on one or group settings and involves relaxation techniques identification and sharing of personal feeling states and improvisation to discover the self and foster growth The choice of music is carefully selected for the client based on their musical preferences and the goals of the session The piece is usually classical and it must reflect the age and attention abilities of the child in length and genre A full explanation of the exercises must be offered at their level of understanding 69 Nordoff Robbins Main article Nordoff Robbins music therapy Paul Nordoff a Juilliard School graduate and Professor of Music was a pianist and composer who upon seeing disabled children respond so positively to music gave up his academic career to further investigate the possibility of music as a means for therapy Clive Robbins a special educator partnered with Nordoff for over 17 years in the exploration and research of music s effects on disabled children first in the UK and then in the United States in the 1950s and 60s Their pilot projects included placements at care units for autistic children and child psychiatry departments where they put programs in place for children with mental disorders emotional disturbances developmental delays and other handicaps Their success at establishing a means of communication and relationship with children with cognitive impairments at the University of Pennsylvania gave rise to the National Institutes of Health s first grant given of this nature and the 5 year study Music therapy project for psychotic children under seven at the day care unit involved research publication training and treatment 70 page needed Several publications including Therapy in Music for Handicapped Children Creative Music Therapy Music Therapy in Special Education as well as instrumental and song books for children were released during this time Nordoff and Robbins s success became known globally in the mental health community and they were invited to share their findings and offer training on an international tour that lasted several years Funds were granted to support the founding of the Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Centre 71 in Great Britain in 1974 where a one year graduate program for students was implemented In the early eighties a center was opened in Australia and various programs and institutes for music therapy were founded in Germany and other countries In the United States the Nordoff Robbins Center for Music Therapy was established at New York University in 1989 72 Today Nordoff Robbins is a music therapy Theoretical Model Approach 73 The Nordoff Robbins approach based on the belief that everyone is capable of finding meaning in and benefiting from musical experience is now practiced by hundreds of therapists internationally This approach focuses on treatment through the creation of music by both therapist and client together The therapist uses various techniques so that even the most low functioning individuals can actively participate 74 Orff Further information Orff Schulwerk Gertrude Orff developed Orff Music Therapy at the Kinderzentrum Munchen Both the clinical setting of social pediatrics and the Orff Schulwerk schoolwork approach in music education developed by German composer Carl Orff influence this method which is used with children with developmental problems delays and disabilities 75 Theodor Hellbrugge developed the area of social pediatrics after the Second World War in Germany He understood that medicine alone could not meet the complex needs of developmentally disabled children Hellbrugge consulted psychologists occupational therapists and other mental healthcare professionals whose knowledge and skills could aid in the diagnostics and treatment of children Gertrude Orff was asked to develop a form of therapy based on the Orff Schulwerk approach to support the emotional development of patients Elements found in both the music therapy and education approaches include the understanding of holistic music presentation as involving word sound and movement the use of both music and play improvisation as providing a creative stimulus for the child to investigate and explore Orff instrumentation including keyboard instruments and percussion instruments as a means of participation and interaction in a therapeutic setting and the multisensory aspects of music used by the therapist to meet the particular needs of the child such as both feeling and hearing sound 75 Corresponding with the attitudes of humanistic psychology the developmental potential of the child as in the acknowledgement of their strengths as well as their handicaps and the importance of the therapist child relationship are central factors in Orff music therapy The strong emphasis on social integration and the involvement of parents in the therapeutic process found in social pediatrics also influence theoretical foundations Knowledge of developmental psychology puts into perspective how developmental disabilities influence the child as do their social and familial environments The basis for interaction in this method is known as responsive interaction in which the therapist meets the child at their level and responds according to their initiatives combining both humanistic and developmental psychology philosophies Involving the parents in this type of interaction by having them participate directly or observe the therapist s techniques equips the parents with ideas of how to interact appropriately with their child thus fostering a positive parent child relationship 75 Cultural aspectsThrough the ages music has been an integral component of rituals ceremonies healing practices and spiritual and cultural traditions 3 Further Michael Bakan author of World Music Traditions and Transformations states that Music is a mode of cultural production and can reveal much about how the culture works 76 something ethnomusicologists study Cultural considerations in music therapy services education and research The 21st century is a culturally pluralistic world In some countries such as the United States an individual may have multiple cultural identities that are quite different from the music therapist s These include race ethnicity culture and or heritage religion sex ability disability education or socioeconomic status 77 78 79 Music therapists strive to achieve multicultural competence through a lifelong journey of formal and informal education and self reflection Multicultural therapy uses modalities and defines goals consistent with the life experiences and cultural values of clients 80 6 rather than basing therapy on the therapist s worldview or the dominant culture s norms Empathy in general is an important aspect of any mental health practitioner and the same is true for music therapists as is multicultural awareness It is the added complexity to cultural empathy that comes from adding music that provides both the greater risk and potential to provide exceptional culturally sensitive therapy Valentino 2006 An extensive knowledge of a culture is really needed to provide this effective treatment as providing culturally sensitive music therapy goes beyond knowing the language of speech the country or even some background about the culture Simply choosing music that is from the same country of origin or that has the same spoken language is not effective for providing music therapy as music genres vary as do the messages each piece of music sends Also different cultures view and use music in various ways and may not always be the same as how the therapist views and uses music Melody Schwantes and her colleagues wrote an article that describes the effective use of the Mexican corrido in a bereavement group of Mexican migrant farm workers Schwantes Wigram Lipscomb amp Richards 2011 This support group was dealing with the loss of two of their coworkers after an accident they were in and so the corrido a song form traditionally used for telling stories of the deceased An important element that was also mentioned was that songwriting has shown to be a large cultural artifact in many cultures and that there are many subtle messages and thoughts provided in songs that would otherwise be hard to identify Lastly the authors of this study stated that Given the position and importance of songs in all cultures the example in this therapeutic process demonstrates the powerful nature of lyrics and music to contain and express difficult and often unspoken feelings Schwantes et al 2011 Usage by regionAfrican continent In 1999 the first program for music therapy in Africa opened in Pretoria South Africa Research has shown that in Tanzania patients can receive palliative care for life threatening illnesses directly after the diagnosis of these illnesses This is different from many Western countries because they reserve palliative care for patients who have an incurable illness Music is also viewed differently between Africa and Western countries In Western countries and a majority of other countries throughout the world music is traditionally seen as entertainment whereas in many African cultures music is used in recounting stories celebrating life events or sending messages 81 Australia Music for healing in ancient times One of the first groups known to heal with sound were the aboriginal people of Australia The modern name of their healing tool is the didgeridoo but it was originally called the yidaki The yidaki produced sounds that are similar to the sound healing techniques used in modern day The sound of the didgeridoo produces a low bass frequency For at least 40 000 years the healing tool was believed to assist in healing broken bones muscle tears and illnesses of every kind 82 However here are no reliable sources stating the didgeridoo s exact age Archaeological studies of rock art in Northern Australia suggest that the people of the Kakadu region of the Northern Territory have been using the didgeridoo for less than 1 000 years based on the dating of paintings on cave walls and shelters from this period A clear rock painting in Ginga Wardelirrhmeng on the northern edge of the Arnhem Land plateau from the freshwater period 83 that had begun 1500 years ago 84 shows a didgeridoo player and two songmen participating in an Ubarr ceremony 85 Music Therapy in modern times An allied health profession 1949 in Australia music therapy not clinical music therapy as understood today was started through concerts organized by the Australian Red Cross along with a Red Cross Music Therapy Committee The key Australian body the Australian Music Therapy Association AMTA was founded in 1975 Canada History ca1940 present For earlier history related to western traditions see Western cultures sub section In 1956 Fran Herman one of Canada s music therapy pioneers began a remedial music program at the Home For Incurable Children now known as the Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital in Toronto Her group The Wheelchair Players continued until 1964 and is considered to be the first music therapy group project in Canada 86 Its production The Emperor s Nightingale was the subject of a documentary film Composer pianist Alfred Rose a professor at the University of Western Ontario also pioneered the use of music therapy in London Ontario at Westminster Hospital in 1952 and at the London Psychiatric Hospital in 1956 87 Two other music therapy programs were initiated during the 1950s one by Norma Sharpe at St Thomas Psychiatric Hospital in St Thomas Ontario and the other by Therese Pageau at the Hopital St Jean de Dieu now Hopital Louis Hippolyte Lafontaine in Montreal A conference in August 1974 organized by Norma Sharpe and six other music therapists led to the founding of the Canadian Music Therapy Association which was later renamed the Canadian Association for Music Therapy CAMT 88 As of 2009 the organization had over 500 members Canada s first music therapy training program was founded in 1976 at Capilano College now Capilano University in North Vancouver by Nancy McMaster and Carolyn Kenny 89 China The relationship between music therapy and health has long been documented in ancient China It is said that in ancient times really good traditional Chinese medicine did not use acupuncture or traditional Chinese medicine but music at the end of a song people were safe when they were discharged As early as before the spring and Autumn period and the Warring States period the Yellow Emperor s Canon of internal medicine believed that the five tones Palace Shang horn emblem and feather belonged to the five elements gold wood water fire and earth and were associated with five basic emotions joy anger worry thought and fear that is the five chronicles Different music such as palace Shang horn micro and feather were used to target different diseases More than 2000 years ago the book Yue Ji also talked about the important role of music in regulating life harmony and improving health Zuo Zhuan recorded the famous doctors of the state of Qin and the discussion that music can prevent and treat diseases there are six or seven days the hair is colorless the emblem is five colors and sex produces six diseases It is emphasized that silence should be controlled and appropriate in order to have a beneficial regulating effect on the human body The book the soul and the body flow the spirit also flows Zhang Jingyue and Xu Lingtai famous medical experts in the Ming and Qing Dynasties also specially discussed phonology and medicine in the classics with wings and Yuefu Chuansheng For example Liu Xueyu one of the emperors of the Tang Dynasty cured some stubborn diseases through the records of music in the Tang Dynasty Chinese contemporary music therapy began in the 1980s In 1984 Professor Zhang Boyuan of the Department of psychology of Peking University published the experimental report on the research of physical and mental defense of music which was the first published scientific research article on music therapy in China In 1986 Professor Gao Tian of Beijing Conservatory of music published his paper Research on the relieving effect of music on pain In 1989 the Chinese society of therapeutics was officially established In 1994 pukaiyuan published his monograph music therapy In 1995 he Huajun and Lu Tingzhu published a monograph music therapy In 2000 Zhang Hongyi edited and published fundamentals of music therapy In 2002 fan Xinsheng edited and published music therapy In 2007 Gao Tian edited and published the basic theory of music therapy In short Chinese music therapy has made rapid progress in theoretical research literature review and clinical research In addition the music therapy methods under the guidance of ancient Chinese music therapy theory and traditional Chinese medicine theory with a long history have attracted worldwide attention The prospect of Chinese music therapy is broad 90 Germany The Germany Music Therapy Society defines music therapy as the targeted use of music as part of a therapeutic relationship to restore maintain and promote mental physical and cognitive health Musiktherapie ist der gezielte Einsatz von Musik im Rahmen der therapeutischen Beziehung zur Wiederherstellung Erhaltung und Forderung seelischer korperlicher und geistiger Gesundheit 91 India The roots of musical therapy in India can be traced back to ancient Hindu mythology Vedic texts and local folk traditions 92 It is very possible that music therapy has been used for hundreds of years in Indian culture In the 1990s another dimension to this known as Musopathy was postulated by Indian musician Chitravina Ravikiran based on fundamental criteria derived from acoustic physics The Indian Association of Music Therapy was established in 2010 by Dr Dinesh C Sharma with a motto to use pleasant sounds in a specific manner like drug in due course of time as green medicine 93 He also published the International Journal of Music Therapy ISSN 2249 8664 to popularize and promote music therapy research on an international platform 94 Suvarna Nalapat has studied music therapy in the Indian context Her books Nadalayasindhu Ragachikitsamrutam 2008 Music Therapy in Management Education and Administration 2008 and Ragachikitsa 2008 are accepted textbooks on music therapy and Indian arts 95 96 97 98 99 The Music Therapy Trust of India is another venture in the country It was started by Margaret Lobo 100 She is the founder and director of the Otakar Kraus Music Trust and her work began in 2004 101 Lebanon In 2006 Hamda Farhat introduced music therapy to Lebanon developing and inventing therapeutic methods such as the triple method to treat hyperactivity depression anxiety addiction and post traumatic stress disorder She has met with great success in working with many international organizations and in the training of therapists educators and doctors citation needed The Lebanese Association Of Music Therapy L A M T ref number 65 is the only reference at Lebanon the president Dr Hamda farhat members administer Dr Antoine chartouni Dr Elia Francis Safi TRAINING and Formation Norway Norway is recognized as an important country for music therapy research Its two major research centers are the Center for Music and Health 102 with the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo and the Grieg Academy Centre for Music Therapy GAMUT 103 at University of Bergen The former was mostly developed by professor Even Ruud while professor Brynjulf Stige is largely responsible for cultivating the latter The center in Bergen has 18 staff including 2 professors and 4 associate professors as well as lecturers and PhD students Two of the field s major international research journals are based in Bergen Nordic Journal for Music Therapy 104 and Voices A World Forum for Music Therapy 105 Norway s main contribution to the field is mostly in the area of community music therapy which tends to be as much oriented toward social work as individual psychotherapy and music therapy research from this country uses a wide variety of methods to examine diverse methods across an array of social contexts including community centers medical clinics retirement homes and prisons Nigeria The origins of Musical therapy practices in Nigeria is unknown however the country is identified to have a lengthy lineage and history of musical therapy being utilized throughout the culture The most common people associated with music therapy are herbalists Witch doctors and faith healers according to Professor Charles O Aluede of Ambrose Alli University Ekpoma Edo State Nigeria 106 Applying music and thematic sounds to the healing process is believed to help the patient overcome true sickness in his her mind which then will seemingly cure the disease Another practice involving music is called Igbeuku a religious practice performed by faith healers In the practice of Igbeuku patients are persuaded to confess their sins which cause themselves serve discomfort Following a confession patients feel emotionally relieved because the priest has announced them clean and subjected them to a rigorous dancing exercise The dancing exercise is a thank you for the healing and tribute to the spiritual greater beings The dance is accompanied by music and can be included among the unorthodox medical practices of Nigerian culture While most of the music therapy practices come in the medical field musical therapy is often used in the passing of a loved one The use of song and dance in a funeral setting is very common across the continent but especially in Nigeria Songs allude to the idea the finally resting place is Hades hell The music helps alleviate the sorrows felt by the family members and friends of the lost loved one Along with music therapy being a practice for funeral events it is also implemented to those dying as a last resort tactic of healing The Esan of Edo State of Nigeria in particular herbalists perform practices with an Oko a small aerophone made of elephant tusk which is blown into dying patients ears to resuscitate them Nigeria is full of interesting cultural practices in which contribute a lot to the music therapy world citation needed South Africa There are longstanding traditions of music healing which in some ways may be very different than music therapy 107 Mercedes Pavlicevic 1955 2018 108 109 an international music therapist along with Kobie Temmingh pioneered the music therapy program at the University of Pretoria which debuted with a master s degree program in 1999 She noted the differences in longstanding traditions and other ways of viewing healing or music A Nigerian colleague felt that music in Africa is healing and what is music therapy other than some colonial import 107 Pavlicevic noted that in Africa there is a long tradition of music healing and asked Can there be a synthesis of these two music based practices towards something new I am not altogether convinced that African music healing and music therapy are especially closely related emphasis added But I am utterly convinced that music therapy can learn an enormous amount from the African worldview and from music making in Africa rather than from African music healing as such 107 The South African Music Therapy Association can provide information to the public about music therapy or educational programs in South Africa 110 South Africa was selected to host the 16th World Congress of Music Therapy in July 2020 a triennial World Federation of Music Therapy event Due to the coronavirus pandemic SARS CoV 2 the congress was moved to an online event 111 United States Credential National board certification current as of 2021 MT BC Music Therapist Board Certified also written as Board Certified Music Therapist 112 State license or registration varies by state see below The credentials listed below were previously conferred by the former national organizations AAMT and NAMT these credentials have not been available since 1998 113 CMT Certified Music Therapist ACMT Advanced Certified Music Therapist RMT Registered Music Therapist There are other countries that use RMT as a credential such as Australia 114 that is different from the U S credential The states of Georgia Illinois Iowa Maryland North Dakota Nevada New Jersey 115 Oklahoma Oregon Rhode Island and Virginia 116 have established licenses for music therapists 117 118 while in Wisconsin music therapists must be registered and in Utah hold state certification 117 118 In the State of New York the Creative Arts Therapy license LCAT incorporates the music therapy credential within their licensure a mental health license that requires a master s degree and post graduate supervision 119 The states of California and Connecticut have title protection 118 for music therapists meaning only those with the MT BC credential can use the title Board Certified Music Therapist Professional Association The American Music Therapy Association AMTA Education Publication on music therapy education and training has been detailed in both single author Goodman 2011 and edited Goodman 2015 2023 volumes The register of the European Music Therapy Confederation lists all educational training programs throughout Europe A music therapy degree candidate can earn an undergraduate master s or doctoral degree in music therapy Many AMTA approved programs in the United States offer equivalency and certificate degrees in music therapy for students that have completed a degree in a related field Some practicing music therapists have held PhDs either in music therapy or in fields related to music therapy A music therapist typically incorporates music therapy techniques with broader clinical practices such as psychotherapy rehabilitation and other practices depending on client needs Music therapy services rendered within the context of a social service educational or health care agency are often reimbursable by insurance or other sources of funding for individuals with certain needs A degree in music therapy requires proficiency in guitar piano voice music theory music history reading music improvisation as well as varying levels of skill in assessment documentation and other counseling and health care skills depending on the focus of the particular university s program 1200 hours of clinical experience are required some of which are gained during an approximately six month internship that takes place after all other degree requirements are met 112 After successful completion of educational requirements including internship music therapists can apply to take take and pass the Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy The current national credential is MT BC Music Therapist Board Certified It is not required in all states To be eligible to apply to take the Board Certification Examination in Music Therapy an individual must successfully complete a music therapy degree from a program accredited by AMTA at a college or university or have a bachelor s degree and complete all of the music therapy course requirements from an accredited program which includes successfully completing a music therapy internship To maintain the credential 100 units of continuing education must be completed every five years The board exam is created by and administered through The Certification Board for Music Therapists 112 120 History c 1900 present For earlier history related to western traditions see Western cultures sub section From a western viewpoint music therapy in the 20th and 21st centuries as of 2021 as an evidence based allied healthcare profession grew out of the aftermath of World Wars I and II when particularly in the United Kingdom and United States musicians would travel to hospitals and play music for soldiers suffering from with war related emotional and physical trauma 60 121 122 Using music to treat the mental and physical ailments of active duty military and veterans was not new Its use was recorded during the U S Civil War and Florence Nightingale used it a decade earlier in the Crimean War 123 Despite research data observations by doctors and nurses praise from patients and willing musicians it was difficult to vastly increase music therapy services or establish lasting music therapy education programs or organizations in the early 20th century 60 121 However many of the music therapy leaders of this time period provided music therapy during WWI or to its veterans These were pioneers in the field such as Eva Vescelius musician author 1903 founder of the short lived National Therapeutic Society of New York and the 1913 Music and Health journal and creator teacher of a musicotherapy course Margaret Anderton pianist WWI music therapy provider for Canadian soldiers a strong believer in training for music therapists and 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher Isa Maud Ilsen a nurse and musician who was the American Red Cross Director of Hospital Music in WWI reconstruction hospitals 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher 1926 founder of the National Association for Music in Hospitals and author and Harriet Ayer Seymour music therapist to WWI veterans author researcher lecturer teacher founder of the National Foundation for Music Therapy in 1941 author of the first music therapy textbook published in the US Several physicians also promoted music as a therapeutic agent during this time period 60 121 In the 1940s changes in philosophy regarding care of psychiatric patients as well as the influx of WWII veterans in Veterans Administration hospitals renewed interest in music programs for patients 60 121 Many musicians volunteered to provide entertainment and were primarily assigned to perform on psychiatric wards Positive changes in patients mental and physical health were noted by nurses The volunteer musicians many of whom had degrees in music education becoming aware of the powerful effects music could have on patients realized that specialized training was necessary 60 121 The first music therapy bachelor s degree program was established in 1944 with three others and one master s degree program quickly following Michigan State College now a University 1944 the University of Kansas master s degree only 1946 the College of the Pacific 1947 The Chicago Musical College 1948 and Alverno College 1948 The National Association for Music Therapy NAMT a professional association was formed in 1950 124 In 1956 the first music therapy credential in the US Registered Music Therapist RMT was instituted by the NAMT 60 The American Music Therapy Association AMTA was founded in 1998 as a merger between the National Association for Music Therapy NAMT founded in 1950 125 and the American Association for Music Therapy AAMT founded in 1971 126 United Kingdom Live music was used in hospitals after both World Wars as part of the treatment program for recovering soldiers Clinical music therapy in Britain as it is understood today was pioneered in the 1960s and 1970s by French cellist Juliette Alvin whose influence on the current generation of British music therapy lecturers remains strong Mary Priestley one of Juliette Alvin s students created analytical music therapy The Nordoff Robbins approach to music therapy developed from the work of Paul Nordoff and Clive Robbins in the 1950 60s Practitioners are registered with the Health Professions Council and starting from 2007 new registrants must normally hold a master s degree in music therapy There are master s level programs in music therapy in Manchester Bristol Cambridge South Wales Edinburgh and London and there are therapists throughout the UK The professional body in the UK is the British Association for Music Therapy 127 In 2002 the World Congress of Music Therapy coordinated and promoted by the World Federation of Music Therapy was held in Oxford on the theme of Dialogue and Debate 128 In November 2006 Dr Michael J Crawford and his colleagues again found that music therapy helped the outcomes of schizophrenic patients 129 130 Military active duty veterans family membersHistory Music therapy finds its roots in the military The United States Department of War issued Technical Bulletin 187 in 1945 which described the use of music in the recovery of military service members in Army hospitals 131 The use of music therapy in military settings started to flourish and develop following World War II and research and endorsements from both the United States Army and the Surgeon General of the United States Although these endorsements helped music therapy develop there was still a recognized need to assess the true viability and value of music as a medically based therapy Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the Office of the Surgeon General worked together to lead one of the earliest assessments of a music therapy program The goal of the study was to understand whether music presented according to a specific plan influenced recovery among service members with mental and emotional disorders 132 Eventually case reports in reference to this study relayed not only the importance but also the impact of music therapy services in the recovery of military service personnel The first university sponsored music therapy course was taught by Margaret Anderton in 1919 at Columbia University 133 Anderton s clinical specialty was working with wounded Canadian soldiers during World War II using music based services to aid in their recovery process Today Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom have both presented an array of injuries however the two signature injuries are posttraumatic stress disorder PTSD and traumatic brain injury TBI These two signature injuries are increasingly common among millennial military service members and in music therapy programs A person diagnosed with PTSD can associate a memory or experience with a song they have heard This can result in either good or bad experiences If it is a bad experience the song s rhythm or lyrics can bring out the person s anxiety or fear response If it is a good experience the song can bring feelings of happiness or peace which could bring back positive emotions Either way music can be used as a tool to bring emotions forward and help the person cope with them Methods Music therapists work with active duty military personnel veterans service members in transition and their families Music therapists strive to engage clients in music experiences that foster trust and complete participation over the course of their treatment process Music therapists use an array of music centered tools techniques and activities when working with military associated clients many of which are similar to the techniques used in other music therapy settings These methods include but are not limited to group drumming listening singing and songwriting Songwriting is a particularly effective tool with military veterans struggling with PTSD and TBI as it creates a safe space to work through traumatic experiences and transform traumatic memories into healthier associations 134 This section is missing information about on music therapy methods with military populations is incomplete Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page November 2020 Programs Music therapy in the military is seen in programs on military bases VA healthcare facilities military treatment facilities and military communities Music therapy programs have a large outreach because they exist for all phases of military life pre mobilization deployment post deployment recovery in the case of injury and among families of fallen military service personnel 135 The Exceptional Family Member Program EFMP also exists to provide music therapy services to active duty military families who have a family member with a developmental physical emotional or intellectual disorder Currently programs at the Davis Monthan Air Force Base Resounding Joy Inc and the Music Institute of Chicago partner with EFMP services to provide music therapy services to eligible military family members 135 Music therapy programs primarily target active duty military members and their treatment facility to provide reconditioning among members convalescing in Army hospitals 136 Although music therapy programs not only benefit the military but rather a wide range of clients including the U S Air Force American Navy and U S Marines Corp Individuals exposed to trauma benefit from their essential rehabilitative tools to follow the course of recovery from stress disorders Music therapists are certified professionals who possess the abilities to determine appropriate interventions to support one recovering from a physically emotionally or mentally traumatic experience 137 In addition to their skills they play an integral part throughout the treatment process of service members diagnosed with post traumatic stress or brain injuries In many cases self expression through songwriting or using instruments help restore emotions that can be lost following trauma 137 Music has a significant effect on troops traveling overseas or between bases because many soldiers view music to be an escape from war a connection to their homeland and families or as motivation By working with a certified music therapist marines undergo sessions re instituting concepts of cognition memory attention and emotional processing 138 Although programs primarily focus on phases of military life other service members such as the U S Air Force are eligible for treatment as well For instance during a music therapy session a man begins to play a song to a wounded Airmen The Airmen says music allows me to talk about something that happened without talking about it 139 Music allows the active duty airmen to open up about previous experiences while reducing his anxiety level HistoryThe use of music to soothe grief has been used since the time of David and King Saul In I Samuel David plays the lyre to make King Saul feel relieved and better It has since been used all over the world for treatment of various issues though the first recorded use of official music therapy was in 1789 an article titled Music Physically Considered by an unknown author was found in Columbian Magazine The creation and expansion of music therapy as a treatment modality thrived in the early to mid 1900s and while a number of organizations were created none survived for long It wasn t until 1950 that the National Association for Music Therapy was founded in New York that clinical training and certification requirements were created In 1971 the American Association for Music Therapy was created though at that time called the Urban Federation of Music Therapists The Certification Board for Music Therapists was created in 1983 which strengthened the practice of music therapy and the trust that it was given In 1998 the American Music Therapy Association was formed out of a merger between National and American Associations and as of 2017 is the single largest music therapy organization in the world American music therapy 1998 2011 citation needed Ancient flutes carved from ivory and bone were found by archaeologists that were determined to be from as far back as 43 000 years ago He also states that The earliest fragment of musical notation is found on a 4 000 year old Sumerian clay tablet which includes instructions and tuning for a hymn honoring the ruler Lipit Ishtar But for the title of oldest extant song most historians point to Hurrian Hymn No 6 an ode to the goddess Nikkal that was composed in cuneiform by the ancient Hurrian s sometime around the 14th century B C 140 Western cultures Music and healing Music has been used as a healing implement for centuries 141 Apollo is the ancient Greek god of music and of medicine and his son Aesculapius was said to cure diseases of the mind by using song and music By 5000 BC music was used for healing by Egyptian priest physicians 121 Plato said that music affected the emotions and could influence the character of an individual Aristotle taught that music affects the soul and described music as a force that purified the emotions Aulus Cornelius Celsus advocated the sound of cymbals and running water for the treatment of mental disorders Music as therapy was practiced in the Bible when David played the harp to rid King Saul of a bad spirit 1 Sam 16 23 142 page needed As early as 400 B C Hippocrates played music for mental patients In the thirteenth century Arab hospitals contained music rooms for the benefit of the patients 143 In the United States Native American medicine men often employed chants and dances as a method of healing patients 144 The Turco Persian psychologist and music theorist al Farabi 872 950 known as Alpharabius in Europe dealt with music for healing in his treatise Meanings of the Intellect in which he discussed the therapeutic effects of music on the soul 145 In his De vita libri tres published in 1489 Platonist Marsilio Ficino gives a lengthy account of how music and songs can be used to draw celestial benefits for staying healthy 146 Robert Burton wrote in the 17th century in his classic work The Anatomy of Melancholy that music and dance were critical in treating mental illness especially melancholia 147 148 149 The rise of an understanding of the body and mind in terms of the nervous system led to the emergence of a new wave of music for healing in the eighteenth century Earlier works on the subject such as Athanasius Kircher s Musurgia Universalis of 1650 and even early eighteenth century books such as Michael Ernst Ettmuller s 1714 Disputatio effectus musicae in hominem Disputation on the Effect of Music on Man or Friedrich Erhardt Niedten s 1717 Veritophili still tended to discuss the medical effects of music in terms of bringing the soul and body into harmony But from the mid eighteenth century works on the subject such as Richard Brocklesby s 1749 Reflections of Antient and Modern Musick the 1737 Memoires of the French Academy of Sciences or Ernst Anton Nicolai s 1745 Die Verbindung der Musik mit der Arzneygelahrheit The Connection of Music to Medicine stressed the power of music over the nerves 150 Music therapy 17th 19th century After 1800 some books on music and medicine drew on the Brunonian system of medicine arguing that the stimulation of the nerves caused by music could directly improve or harm health 151 Throughout the 19th century an impressive number of books and articles were authored by physicians in Europe and the United States discussing use of music as a therapeutic agent to treat both mental and physical illness 121 60 Music therapy 1900 c 1940 From a western viewpoint music therapy in the 20th and 21st centuries as of 2021 as an evidence based allied healthcare profession grew out of the aftermath of World Wars I and II Particularly in the United Kingdom and United States musicians would travel to hospitals and play music for soldiers with war related emotional and physical trauma 60 121 122 Using music to treat the mental and physical ailments of active duty military and veterans was not new Its use was recorded during the US Civil War and Florence Nightingale used it a decade earlier in the Crimean War 123 Despite research data observations by doctors and nurses praise from patients and willing musicians it was difficult to vastly increase music therapy services or establish lasting music therapy education programs or organizations in the early 20th century 60 121 However many of the music therapy leaders of this time period provided music therapy during WWI or to its veterans These were pioneers in the field such as Eva Vescelius musician author 1903 founder of the short lived National Therapeutic Society of New York and the 1913 Music and Health journal and creator teacher of a musicotherapy course Margaret Anderton pianist World War I music therapy provider for Canadian soldiers a strong believer in training for music therapists and 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher Isa Maud Ilsen a nurse and musician who was the American Red Cross Director of Hospital Music in World War I reconstruction hospitals 1919 Columbia University musicotherapy teacher 1926 founder of the National Association for Music in Hospitals and author and Harriet Ayer Seymour music therapist to World War I veterans author researcher lecturer teacher founder of the National Foundation for Music Therapy in 1941 author of the first music therapy textbook published in the United States Several physicians also promoted music as a therapeutic agent during this time period 60 121 In the United States the first music therapy bachelor s degree program was established in 1944 at Michigan State College now Michigan State University 60 For history from the early 20th century to the present see continents or individual countries in Usage by region section See alsoAffective neuroscience Art therapy Biomusicology Chronobiology Dispokinesis Eloise psychiatric hospital Embodied music cognition Expressive therapies Melodic intonation therapy Music and sleep Music as a coping strategy Musical analysis Music cognition Music therapy in Canada Music psychology Psychoacoustics Psychoanalysis and music PsychoneuroimmunologyReferences 152 153 154 155 a b American Music Therapy Association About Music Therapy amp AMTA About Music Therapy amp AMTA Retrieved January 2 2021 Darnley Smith Rachel M Patey Helen February 18 2003 Music Therapy Creative Therapies in Practice series London Sage Publications Ltd ISBN 978 0761957775 a b Gaston E Thayer 1968 Man and music In Gaston E Thayer ed Music in Therapy New York The Macmillan Company pp 7 29 Chase Kristen M 2002 The Music Therapy Assessment Handbook Columbus MO Southern Pen Publishers Gfeller Kate E 2008 Music A human phenomenon and therapeutic tool In Davis William B Gfeller Kate E Thaut Michael H eds An Introduction to Music Therapy Theory and Practice 3 ed Silver Spring MD The American Music Therapy Association pp 41 75 ISBN 978 1884914201 Bruscia Kenneth E 1987 IAP scales and criteria In Bruscia Kenneth E ed Improvisational models of music therapy Springfield IL Charles C Thomas pp 465 496 Schneck Daniel J Berger Dorita S 2006 The Music Effect Music Physiology and Clinical Applications Philadelphia PA Jessica Kingsley Publishers ISBN 978 1843107712 Sarrazin Natalie 2016 Music Fundamentals and Educational Roots in the U S Music and the Child Milne Library Open SUNY Textbooks ISBN 9781942341208 Musopathy Mapping music and its medicinal benefits DT Next December 31 2019 About Sound Healing Sound Healing Center Gibson David 2018 The Complete Guide to Sound Healing 2nd ed Sound of Light McCaffrey T Edwards J Fannon D 2011 Is there a role for music therapy in the recovery approach in mental health PDF The Arts in Psychotherapy 38 3 185 89 doi 10 1016 j aip 2011 04 006 hdl 10344 3362 McCaffrey Triona Edwards Jane Fannon Dominic 2011 Is there a role for music therapy in the recovery approach in mental health The Arts in Psychotherapy 38 3 185 189 doi 10 1016 j aip 2011 04 006 hdl 10344 3362 a b Swedberg Yinger Olivia Gooding Lori July 2014 Music Therapy and Music Medicine for Children and Adolescents Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics 23 3 535 53 doi 10 1016 j chc 2013 03 003 PMID 24975624 a b c Keen MSocSc Alexander W March 2005 Using music as a therapy tool to motivate troubled adolescents Social Work in Health Care 39 3 4 3 4 361 73 doi 10 1300 J010v39n03 09 PMID 15774401 S2CID 25035875 Music Therapy with High Risk Adolescents PDF PDF American Music Therapy Association Michigan State University Chapter Michigan State University Retrieved August 23 2018 LaGasse AB Thaut MH April 15 2012 Music and Rehabilition Neurological Approaches pp 153 63 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199586974 003 0012 ISBN 9780199586974 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Aalbers Sonja Fusar Poli Laura Freeman Ruth E Spreen Marinus Ket Johannes Cf Vink Annemiek C Maratos Anna Crawford Mike Chen Xi Jing November 2017 Music therapy for depression The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2017 11 CD004517 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD004517 pub3 hdl 10044 1 56028 ISSN 1469 493X PMC 6486188 PMID 29144545 Geipel J Koenig J Hillecke TK Resch F Kaess M January 2018 Music based interventions to reduce internalizing symptoms in children and adolescents A meta analysis Journal of Affective Disorders 225 647 656 doi 10 1016 j jad 2017 08 035 PMID 28889050 Bednarz LF Nikkel B 1992 The role of music therapy in the treatment of young adults diagnosed with mental illness and substance abuse Music Therapy Perspectives 10 21 26 doi 10 1093 mtp 10 1 21 a b c d Stanley P Ramsey D November 15 2012 Music therapy in physical medicine and rehabilitation Australian Occupational Therapy Journal 47 3 111 18 doi 10 1046 j 1440 1630 2000 00215 x Crowe Barbara J 2007 Music Therapy for Children Adolescents and Adults with Mental Disorders Silver Springs MD American Music Therapy Association Inc pp 201 203 ISBN 978 1884914188 Crowe Barbara J 2007 Music Therapy for Children Adolescents and Adults with Mental Disorders Silver Spring MD American Music Therapy Association Inc p 18 ISBN 978 1884914188 a b c d Haslbeck Friederike B Mueller Katharina Karen Tanja Loewy Joanne Meerpohl Joerg J Bassler Dirk September 7 2023 Cochrane Neonatal Group ed Musical and vocal interventions to improve neurodevelopmental outcomes for preterm infants Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2023 9 CD013472 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD013472 pub2 PMC 10483930 PMID 37675934 Janzen Thenille Braun Thaut Michael H 2018 Rethinking the role of music in the neurodevelopment of autism spectrum disorder Music amp Science 1 205920431876963 doi 10 1177 2059204318769639 Thompson Grace November 23 2017 Long Term Perspectives of Family Quality of Life Following Music Therapy with Young Children on the Autism Spectrum Journal of Music Therapy 54 4 432 59 doi 10 1093 jmt thx013 PMID 29186566 S2CID 4635448 Bradt J Dileo C Potvin N December 2013 Music for stress and anxiety reduction in coronary heart disease patients The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2021 12 CD006577 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD006577 pub3 PMC 8454043 PMID 24374731 S2CID 16861063 Magee WL Clark I Tamplin J Bradt J January 2017 Music interventions for acquired brain injury The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 1 1 CD006787 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD006787 pub3 PMC 6464962 PMID 28103638 a b c d Keough Laurie October 1 2017 Assessment Based Small Group Music Therapy Programming for Individuals with Dementia and Alzheimer s Disease A Multi Year Clinical Project Music Therapy Perspectives 181 189 doi 10 1093 mtp miw021 Bates Elizabeth Wilson Stephen M Saygin Ayse Pinar Dick Frederic Sereno Martin I Knight Robert T Dronkers Nina F April 21 2003 Voxel based lesion symptom mapping Nature Neuroscience 6 5 448 450 doi 10 1038 nn1050 PMID 12704393 S2CID 5134480 Kolk Herman Heeschen Claus May 1990 Adaptation symptoms and impairment symptoms in Broca s aphasia Aphasiology 4 3 221 231 doi 10 1080 02687039008249075 Sacks Oliver June 28 2018 Musicophilia tales of music and the brain Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 1509870141 OCLC 1019654325 a b Manasco Hunter 2013 Introduction to neurogenic communication disorders Jones amp Bartlett Publishers p 93 ISBN 9780763794170 a b c d e f g h i Norton A Zipse L Marchina S Schlaug G July 2009 Melodic intonation therapy shared insights on how it is done and why it might help Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1169 431 6 doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 2009 04859 x PMC 2780359 PMID 19673819 Van Der Meulen Ineke Van De Sandt Koenderman Mieke W M E Heijenbrok Majanka H Visch Brink Evy Ribbers Gerard M November 1 2016 Melodic Intonation Therapy in Chronic Aphasia Evidence from a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10 533 doi 10 3389 fnhum 2016 00533 PMC 5088197 PMID 27847473 Dyukova G M Glozman Zh M Titova E Yu Kriushev E S Gamaleya A A June 8 2010 Speech Disorders in Right Hemisphere Stroke Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology 40 6 593 602 doi 10 1007 s11055 010 9301 9 PMID 20532830 S2CID 28786230 a b c d Zumbansen Anna Peretz Isabelle Hebert Sylvie 2014 Melodic Intonation Therapy Back to Basics for Future Research Frontiers in Neurology 5 7 doi 10 3389 fneur 2014 00007 PMC 3904283 PMID 24478754 Belin P Zilbovicius M Remy Ph Francois C Guillaume S Chain F Rancurel G Samson Y December 1 1996 Recovery from nonfluent aphasia after melodic intonation therapy A PET study Neurology 47 6 1504 1511 doi 10 1212 wnl 47 6 1504 PMID 8960735 S2CID 29742900 Bradt Joke Dileo Cheryl Myers Coffman Katherine Biondo Jacelyn October 12 2021 Music interventions for improving psychological and physical outcomes in people with cancer The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2021 10 CD006911 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD006911 pub4 ISSN 1469 493X PMC 8510511 PMID 34637527 a b Tseng Ping Tao January 26 2016 Significant treatment effect of adjunct music therapy to standard treatment on the positive negative and mood symptoms of schizophrenic patients a meta analysis BMC Psychiatry 16 16 doi 10 1186 s12888 016 0718 8 PMC 4728768 PMID 26812906 a b c Geretsegger M Mossler KA Bieleninik L Chen XJ Heldal TO Gold C May 2017 Music therapy for people with schizophrenia and schizophrenia like disorders The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2017 5 CD004025 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD004025 pub4 PMC 6481900 PMID 28553702 Landis Shack N Heinz AJ Bonn Miller MO 2017 Music Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress in Adults A Theoretical Review Psychomusicology 27 4 334 342 doi 10 1037 pmu0000192 PMC 5744879 PMID 29290641 a b Tang Qishou Huang Zhaohui Zhou Huan Ye Peijie 2020 Effects of music therapy on depression A meta analysis of randomized controlled trials PLOS ONE 15 11 e0240862 Bibcode 2020PLoSO 1540862T doi 10 1371 journal pone 0240862 PMC 7673528 PMID 33206656 Kwan Chi Kin Clift Stephen March 15 2018 Exploring the processes of change facilitated by musical activities on mental wellness Nordic Journal of Music Therapy 27 2 142 157 doi 10 1080 08098131 2017 1363808 ISSN 0809 8131 S2CID 148824220 a b Darnley Smith Rachel February 18 2003 Music Therapy 1st ed SAGE Publications Limited p 30 ISBN 9781847876317 Dalton Thomas A Krout Robert E January 1 2005 Development of the Grief Process Scale through music therapy songwriting with bereaved adolescents The Arts in Psychotherapy 32 2 131 143 doi 10 1016 j aip 2005 02 002 ISSN 0197 4556 Cochrane A L 1972 Effectiveness and Efficiency Random Reflections on Health Services London Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust Davis W B Gfeller K E amp Thaut M H An Introduction to Music Therapy Theory and Practice The Music Therapy Treatment Process 3rd ed Silver Spring Maryland 2008 Bruscia Kenneth E Defining Music Therapy Gilsum NH Barcelona Publishers 1998 Botello R K amp Krout R E 2008 Music therapy assessment of automatic thoughts Developing a cognitive behavioral application of improvisation to assess couple communication Music Therapy Perspectives 26 1 51 55 Freed B S 1987 Songwriting with the chemically dependent Music Therapy Perspectives 4 13 18 Grocke D E Wigram T 2007 Receptive Methods in Music Therapy Techniques and Clinical Applications for Music Therapy Clinicians Educators and Students Jessica Kingsley Publishers ISBN 978 1 84310 413 1 Retrieved November 27 2021 page needed Li Hui Chi Wang Hsiu Hung Chou Fan Hao Chen Kuei Min January 2015 The Effect of Music Therapy on Cognitive Functioning Among Older Adults A Systematic Review and Meta Analysis Journal of the American Medical Directors Association 16 1 71 77 doi 10 1016 j jamda 2014 10 004 PMID 25458447 Stanczyk Malgorzata Monika September 2011 Music therapy in supportive cancer care Reports of Practical Oncology amp Radiotherapy 16 5 170 72 doi 10 1016 j rpor 2011 04 005 PMC 3863265 PMID 24376975 Uedo Noriya Ishikawa Hideki 2004 Reduction in salivary cortisol level by music therapy during colonoscopic examination Hepato Gastroenterology 51 Morimoto K Ishihara R Narahara R Akedo I Ioka T Kaji I Fukuda S 463 465 Azad Sonia May 7 2018 Harmonica being studied in COPD patients WFAA Retrieved August 16 2018 Sekiya Makoto January 9 2014 Swedish music therapy method for aged strikes chord in nursing homes The Japan Times Retrieved August 16 2018 a b c d e Bruscia Kenneth E 2014 Defining Music Therapy 3 ed University Park IL Barcelona Publishers ISBN 9781937440589 a b c d Wheeler Barbara L 2017 Part II Orientations and approaches Music Therapy Handbook New York The Guilford Press pp 129 132 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l Knight Andrew LaGasse Blythe Clair Alicia 2018 Music therapy An introduction to the profession Silver Spring MD The American Music Therapy Association ISBN 978 1 884914 35 5 Stige Brynjulf 2017 Community Music Therapy In Wheeler Barbara L ed Music Therapy Handbook New York The Guilford Press pp 233 245 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 Hurt Thaut Corene P Johnson Sarah B 2017 Neurologic Music Therapy In Wheeler Barbara L ed Handbook of Music Therapy New York The Guilford Press pp 220 232 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 Isenberg Connie 2017 Psychodynamic Approaches In Wheeler Barbara L ed Music Therapy Handbook New York The Guilford Press pp 133 147 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 Hanser Susan 2017 Cognitive Behavioral Approaches In Wheeler Barbara L ed Music Therapy Handbook New York The Guilford Press pp 161 171 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 Abrams Brian 2017 Humanistic Approaches In Wheeler Barbara L ed Music Therapy Handbook New York The Guilford Press pp 148 160 ISBN 978 1 4625 2972 8 Gfeller Kate E Thaut Michael H 2008 Music therapy in the treatment of behavioral emotional disorders In Davis William B Gfeller Kate E Thaut Michael H eds Music Therapy An introduction to theory and practice 3rd ed Silver Spring MD The American Music Therapy Association pp 209 246 ISBN 978 1884914201 Training in 2021 Avalon GIM Training Australia Retrieved December 26 2020 Appalachian State University 2020 Bonny Method Level 1 Training Hayes School of Music Retrieved December 26 2020 a b Bonny Helen L April 2001 Music psychotherapy guided imagery and music Voices A World Forum for Music Therapy 10 3 doi 10 15845 voices v10i3 568 Retrieved November 13 2014 Aigen Kenneth 2005 Being in Music Foundations of Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Barcelona Publishers ISBN 9781891278372 Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Centre History Nordoff Robbins Center for Music Therapy NYU Steinhardt steinhardt nyu edu Retrieved May 6 2019 Temple University 2018 Models of Music Psychotherapy PDF Nordoff Robbins NYU Steinhardt New York University Retrieved November 11 2014 a b c Voigt Melanie November 2003 Orff music therapy an overview Voices A World Forum for Music Therapy 3 3 doi 10 15845 voices v3i3 134 Retrieved November 11 2014 Bakan Michael 2012 World Music Traditions and Transformations New York McGraw Hill p 10 ISBN 978 0073526645 Whitehead Pleaux Annette Tan Xeuli 2017 Preface In Whitehead Pleaux Annette Tan Xueli eds Cultural intersections in music therapy Music health and the person Dallas TX Barcelona Publishers pp xi xii ISBN 9781937440978 Whitehead Pleaux Annette 2017 Discrimination and oppression In Whitehead Pleaux Annette Tan Xeuli eds Cultural intersections in music therapy Music health and the person Dallas Tx Barcelona Publishers pp 3 10 ISBN 9781937440978 Hahna Nicole D 2017 Reflecting on personal bias In Whitehead Pleaux Annette Tan Xueli eds Cultural intersections in music therapy Music health and the person Dallas TX Barcelona Publishers pp 23 33 ISBN 9781937440978 Sue Derald Wing Torino Gina C 2005 Racial cultural competence Awareness knowledge and skills In Carter Robert T ed Handbook of racial cultural psychology and counseling Training and practice Vol 2 Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 3 18 ISBN 0 471 38629 4 Stone Ruth 2005 Music in West Africa Experiencing Music Expressing Culture New York Oxford University page needed Stuart Reid Annaliese and John Sound Healing Ancient Sounds Token Rock TokenRock Retrieved August 5 2017 Kakadu National Park Rock art styles Sayers Andrew 2001 2001 Australian Art Oxford History of Art paperback Oxford University Press USA published July 19 2001 p 19 ISBN 978 0192842145 George Chaloupka Journey in Time p 189 Voices Fran Herman Music Therapist in Canada for over 50 years Canadian Encyclopedia Alfred Rose Canadian Encyclopedia Music Therapy Canadian Encyclopedia Music Therapy 赵小明 2018 本土化音乐治疗与实操 in Chinese Bei fang wen yi chu ban she ISBN 978 7 5317 4243 2 OCLC 1103761472 Deutsche Musiktherapeutische Gesellschaft German Music Therapy Society Was ist Musiktherapie What is music therapy Musiktherapie Retrieved January 2 2021 Cook Patricia Cook Pat 1997 Sacred Music Therapy in North India Vol 39 ed VWB pp 61 83 ISBN 978 3 86135 704 9 JSTOR 41699130 Index of Iamt net in Archived from the original on March 3 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 Suvarna Nalapat 2008 Nadalayasindhu Ragachikitsamritham in Malayalam Kottayam D C Books ISBN 978 81 264 1962 3 Grand Unification for World Peace Music THerapy for Integrating Healthcare PDF Alternative Medicine Medicine Music Therapy in Healthcare The popular Publications Chennai Apollo 2007 Dr Mythili Thirumalach7ary http www emusictherapy com Suvarna Nalapat 2008 Music Therapy in Management Education and Administration New Delhi Readworthy Publications ISBN 978 81 89973 72 8 Ragachikitsa Music Therapy Readworthy Publication New Delhi 2008 Dr Mythili Thirumalachary In Indian Context ISBN 978 81 89973 69 8 The Music Therapy Trust India New Delhi India Archived from the original on October 21 2013 Retrieved July 17 2013 The Music Therapy Trust India New Delhi India www themusictherapytrust com Archived from the original on October 21 2013 Retrieved April 23 2016 Centre for Music and Health the Norwegian Academy of Music Archived from the original on February 4 2015 Retrieved January 29 2015 GAMUT Griegakademiets senter for musikkterapiforsking Uni Research Helse Uni Research Archived from the original on December 17 2014 Retrieved January 29 2015 Nordic Journal of Music Therapy Taylor amp Francis Voices A World Forum for Music Therapy A luede Charles Onomudo 2010 Some Reflections on the Future of Music Therapy in Nigeria PDF ajol info Retrieved March 31 2019 a b c Pavlicevic Mercedes 2001 Music Therapy in South Africa Compromise or Synthesis Voices 1 1 doi 10 15845 voices v1i1 University of Pretoria 2020 Commemorating Mercedes Pavlicevic Online World Congress of Music Therapy The Polyrhythms of Music Therapy Development of Music Therapy in South Africa Retrieved December 30 2020 Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy June 5 2018 Remembering Mercedes Pavlicevic Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy Retrieved December 30 2020 South African Music Therapy Association Home South African Music Therapy Association Retrieved December 26 2020 World Federation of Music Therapy World Congress South Africa WFMT Events Retrieved December 26 2020 a b c American Music Therapy Association Education and Careers Retrieved December 31 2020 American Music Therapy Association How to find a music therapist American Music Therapy Association Retrieved January 1 2021 Australian Music Therapy Association What is an RMT Australian Music Therapy Association Retrieved January 1 2021 NJ Association for Music Therapy Qualifications to practice Advocacy Retrieved December 31 2020 PolicyEngage LLC Virginia SB633 Music therapy definition of music therapist licensure 2019 20 TrackBill Retrieved October 30 2020 a b Certification Board for Music Therapists June 8 2022 State Licensure Certification Board for Music Therapists Retrieved November 20 2022 a b c American Music Therapy Association National Overview of State Recognition State Advocacy Retrieved October 30 2020 New York State Education Department Office of the Professions Creative Arts Therapy License Requirements Mental Health Practitioners Creative Arts Therapy License Requirements Archived from the original on September 8 2022 Retrieved November 1 2020 Certification Board for Music Therapists Recertification Certificants Retrieved December 31 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Davis William B Gfeller Kate E 2008 Music therapy Historical perspective In Davis William B Gfeller Kate E Thaut Michael H eds Music therapy An introduction to theory and practice 3rd ed Silver Spring MD The American Music Therapy Association pp 17 39 ISBN 978 1884914201 a b Degmecic D Pozgain I Filakovic P 2005 Music as Therapy International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 36 2 290 a b Jennifer Springer 2013 A Historical Review of Music Therapy and the Department of Veterans Affairs Thesis Molloy College American Music Therapy Association Music therapy historical review About music therapy amp AMTA Retrieved January 1 2021 Music Therapy Group Outlines Unusual Program The Miami News July 9 1950 p 27 Retrieved March 22 2021 via Newspapers com American Music Therapy Association History of Music Therapy History of Music Therapy Retrieved November 1 2020 British Association for Music Therapy Proceedings from the WFMT World Conference in Oxford UK 23 28 July 2002 Archived from the original on September 27 2006 Retrieved February 14 2009 Talwar N Crawford MJ Maratos A Nur U McDermott O Procter S November 2006 Music therapy for in patients with schizophrenia exploratory randomised controlled trial The British Journal of Psychiatry 189 5 405 9 doi 10 1192 bjp bp 105 015073 PMID 17077429 Music therapy may provide a means of improving mental health among people with schizophrenia but its effects in acute psychoses have not been explored Music therapy may improve schizophrenia symptoms Faculty of Medicine News Imperial College London Technical Bulletin 187 Music in Reconditioning in American Service Forces Convalescent and General Hospitals War Department Technical Bulletin TB Med 187 1945 1 11 Rorke MA 1996 Music and the Wounded of World War II Journal of Music Therapy 33 3 189 207 doi 10 1093 jmt 33 3 189 Wheeler E J I K Funk W S Woods A S Draper and W J Funk Columbia University to Heal Wounded by Music Literary Digest 1919 59 62 Amir Dorit 2004 Giving Trauma a Voice The Role of Improvisational Music Therapy in Exposing Dealing with and Healing a Traumatic Experience of Sexual Abuse Music Therapy Perspectives 22 2 96 103 doi 10 1093 mtp 22 2 96 a b Music Therapy and Military Populations American Music Therapy Association 2014 American Music Therapy Association American Music Therapy Association AMTA www musictherapy org Retrieved March 28 2019 a b Music Therapy and Military Populations American Music Therapy Association AMTA www musictherapy org Retrieved March 28 2019 Music therapy helping marines with TBI s KGTV June 12 2018 Retrieved March 28 2019 Healing through music U S Air Force November 20 2015 Retrieved March 28 2019 Andrews Evan August 8 2023 What is the oldest known piece of music The History Channel Misic P Arandjelovic D Stanojkovic S Vladejic S Mladenovic J 2010 Music Therapy European Psychiatry 25 Supplement 1 839 doi 10 1016 s0924 9338 10 70830 0 S2CID 74635824 Howells John G Osborn M Livia 1984 A reference companion to the history of abnormal psychology Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 24261 8 Retrieved April 21 2013 Antrim Doron K 2006 Music Therapy The Musical Quarterly 30 4 409 420 doi 10 1093 mq xxx 4 409 Antrim Doron K 2006 Music Therapy The Musical Quarterly 30 4 410 doi 10 1093 mq xxx 4 409 Haque Amber 2004 Psychology from Islamic Perspective Contributions of Early Muslim Scholars and Challenges to Contemporary Muslim Psychologists Journal of Religion and Health 43 4 357 377 363 doi 10 1007 s10943 004 4302 z S2CID 38740431 Penelope Gouk 2004 Raising Spirits and Restoring Souls Early Modern Medical Explanations for Music s Effects in Veit Erlmann dir Hearing Cultures Essays on Sound Listening and Modernity Oxford New York Berg Publishers p 101 cf The Anatomy of Melancholy Robert Burton subsection 3 on and after line 3480 Music a Remedy But to leave all declamatory speeches in praise 3481 of divine music I will confine myself to my proper subject besides that excellent power it hath to expel many other diseases it is a sovereign remedy against 3482 despair and melancholy and will drive away the devil himself Canus a Rhodian fiddler in 3483 Philostratus when Apollonius was inquisitive to know what he could do with his pipe told him That he would make a melancholy man merry and him that was merry much merrier than before a lover more enamoured a religious man more devout Ismenias the Theban 3484 Chiron the centaur is said to have cured this and many other diseases by music alone as now they do those saith 3485 Bodine that are troubled with St Vitus s Bedlam dance Humanities are the Hormones A Tarantella Comes to Newfoundland What should we do about it Archived February 15 2015 at the Wayback Machine by Dr John Crellin MUNMED newsletter of the Faculty of Medicine Memorial University of Newfoundland 1996 Aung SK Lee MH 2004 Music Sounds Medicine and Meditation An Integrative Approach to the Healing Arts Alternative amp Complementary Therapies 10 5 266 270 doi 10 1089 act 2004 10 266 Gouk P 2004 Erlmann ed Hearing Cultures Essays on Sound Listening and Modernity Oxford Oxford University Press pp 87 105 Kennaway James 2010 From Sensibility to Pathology The Origins of the Idea of Nervous Music around 1800 Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 65 3 396 426 doi 10 1093 jhmas jrq004 PMC 3935440 PMID 20219729 Reid Amanda 2020 Social Utility of Music A Case For A Copyright Exemption For Therapeutic Uses Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy 30 1 44 SSRN 3733009 Amanda Reid Nicolla Sydney K 2022 Exploring Music Therapists Experiences With and Perceptions About Copyrighted Music A Thematic Analysis Journal of Music Therapy 59 3 269 306 doi 10 1093 jmt thac007 PMID 35932195 SSRN 4185186 Reid Amanda Kresovich Alex 2021 Copyright as a Barrier to Music Therapy Telehealth Interventions Qualitative Interview Study JMIR Formative Research 5 8 e28383 doi 10 2196 28383 PMC 8366753 PMID 34319241 SSRN 3895196 Reid Amanda Mino Pablo 2021 When Therapy Goes Public Copyright Gatekeepers and Sharing Therapeutic Artifacts on Social Media International Journal of Communication 15 950 969 SSRN 3778848 BibliographyAmerican Psychiatric Association 2000 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders 4th ed text rev Washington D C Author Gibson David 2018 The Complete Guide to Sound Healing 2nd ed Sound of Light Goodman K D 2011 Music therapy education and training From theory to practice Charles C Thomas K D Goodman Ed 2015 International perspectives in music therapy education and training Charles C Thomas K D Goodman Ed 2023 Developing issues in world music therapy education and training A plurality of views Charles C Thomas Hilliard R E 2001 The effects of music therapy based bereavement groups on mood and behavior of grieving children A pilot study Journal of Music Therapy 38 4 291 306 Hilliard R E 2007 The effects of orff based music therapy and social work groups on childhood grief symptoms and behaviors Journal of Music Therapy 44 2 123 38 Jones J D 2005 A comparison of songwriting and lyric analysis techniques to evoke emotional change in a single session with people who are chemically dependent journal of Music Therapy 42 94 110 Krout R E 2005 Applications of music therapist composed songs in creating participant connections and facilitating goals and rituals during one time bereavement support groups and programs Music Therapy Perspectives 23 2 118 128 Lindenfelser K J Grocke D amp McFerran K 2008 Bereaved parents experiences of music therapy with their terminally ill child Journal of Music Therapy 45 3 330 48 Rosner R Kruse J amp Hagl M 2010 A meta analysis of interventions for bereaved children and adolescents Death Studies 34 2 99 136 Schwantes M Wigram T McKinney C Lipscomb A amp Richards C 2011 The Mexican corrido and its use in a music therapy bereavement group The Australian Journal of Music Therapy 22 2 20 Silverman M J 2008 Quantitative comparison of cognitive behavioral therapy and music therapy research A methodological best practices analysis to guide future investigation for adult psychiatric patients Journal of Music Therapy 45 4 457 506 Silverman M J 2009 The use of lyric analysis interventions in contemporary psychiatric music therapy Descriptive results of songs and objectives for clinical practice Music Therapy Perspectives 27 1 55 61 Silverman M J amp Marcionetti M J 2004 Immediate effects of a single music therapy intervention on persons who are severely mentally ill Arts in Psychotherapy 31 291 301 Valentino R E 2006 Attitudes towards cross cultural empathy in music therapy Music Therapy Perspectives 24 2 108 114 Whitehead Pleaux A M Baryza M J amp Sheridan R L 2007 Exploring the effects of music therapy on pediatric pain phase 1 The Journal of Music Therapy 44 3 217 41 Further readingAldridge David 2000 Music Therapy in Dementia Care London Jessica Kingsley Publishers ISBN 1853027766 Boso M Politi P Barale F Enzo E 2006 Neurophysiology and neurobiology of the musical experience Functional Neurology 21 4 187 91 PMID 17367577 Boynton Dori compiler 1991 Lady Boynton s New Age Dossiers a Serendipitous Digest of News and Articles on Trends in Modern Day Mysticism and Decadence New Port Richey Flor Lady D Boynton 2 vol N B Anthology of reprinted articles pamphlets etc on New Age aspects of speculation in psychology philosophy music especially music therapy religion sexuality etc Bruscia Kenneth E Frequently Asked Questions About Music Therapy Boyer College of Music and Dance Music Therapy Program Temple University 1993 Bunt Leslie Stige Brynjulf 2014 Music Therapy An Art Beyond Words Second edition London Routledge ISBN 978 0415450683 Davis William B Kate E Gfeller and Michael H Thaut 2008 An Introduction to Music Therapy Theory and Practice Third ed Silver Springs MD American Music Therapy Association ISBN 978 1884914201 Erlmann Veit ed Hearing Cultures Essays on Sound Listening and Modernity New York Berg Publishers 2004 Cf especially Chapter 5 Raising Spirits and Restoring Souls Gibson David 2018 The Complete Guide to Sound Healing 2nd ed Sound of Light Gold C Heldal T O Dahle T Wigram T 2006 Music therapy for schizophrenia or schizophrenia like illnesses Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews Issue 4 Goodman K D 2011 Music Therapy Education and Training From Theory to Practice Springfield IL Charles C Thomas ISBN 978 0398086091 Harbert Wilhelmina K 1947 Some principles practices and techniques in musical therapy University of the Pacific Dissertations Hart Hugh March 23 2008 The New York Times A Season of Song Dance and Autism Section AR p 20 La Musicotherapie thematheque Montreal Bibliotheque du personnel Hopital Riviere des Prairies 1978 Levinge Alison 2015 The Music of Being Music Therapy Winnicott and the School of Object Relations London Jessica Kingsley Publishers ISBN 978 1849055765 Marcello Sorce Keller Some Ethnomusicological Considerations about Magic and the Therapeutic Uses of Music International Journal of Music Education 8 2 1986 13 16 Owens Melissa December 2014 Remembering through Music Music Therapy and Dementia Age in Action 29 3 1 5 Pellizzari Patricia y colaboradores Flavia Kinisberg German Tunon Candela Brusco Diego Patles Vanesa Menendez Julieta Villegas y Emmanuel Barrenechea 2011 Crear Salud aportes de la Musicoterapia preventiva comunitaria Patricia Pellizzari Ediciones Buenos Aires Ruud Even 2010 Music Therapy A Perspective from the Humanities Barcelona Publishers ISBN 978 1 891278 54 9 Tuet R W K Lam L C W 2006 A preliminary study of the effects of music therapy on agitation in Chinese patients with dementia Hong Kong Journal of Psychiatry 16 3 Archived from the original on July 11 2011 Retrieved February 14 2009 Wheeler Barbara L 2015 Music Therapy Research Quantitative And Qualitative Perspectives Barcelona Barcelona Publishers NH ISBN 978 1891278266 Whipple J July 2004 Music in intervention for children and adolescents with autism a meta analysis Journal of Music Therapy 41 2 90 106 doi 10 1093 jmt 41 2 90 PMID 15307805 S2CID 38696989 Wigram Tony 2000 A Method of Music Therapy Assessment for the Diagnosis of Autism and Communication Disorders in Children Music Therapy Perspectives 18 1 13 22 doi 10 1093 mtp 18 1 13 Vladimir Simosko Is Rock Music Harmful Winnipeg 1987 OCLC 757688822 ISBN unspecified Vladimir Simosko Jung Music and Music Therapy Prepared on the Occasion of the C G Jung and the Humanities Colloquium 1987 Winnipeg The Colloqium OCLC 184852242 ISBN unspecified Vomberg Elizabeth Music for the Physically Disabled Child a Bibliography Toronto 1978 OCLC 316014578 ISBN unspecified External links nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about sound therapy Library resources about Music therapy Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Music therapy amp oldid 1216647586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.