Posts Tagged ‘music’
Music useful in soothing the tiny
This is therapy in a newborn intensive care unit, and research suggests that music may help those born way too soon adapt to life outside the womb. Many insurers won’t pay for music therapy because of doubts that it results in any lasting medical improvement. Some doctors say the music works best at relieving babies’ stress and helping parents bond with infants too sick to go home. Read more here…
Music therapy helps people achieve

Music therapy has been used for years in schools, hospitals and other settings. A music therapist works either in groups or one-on-one with individuals to achieve goals, whether that means helping them rehab from an accident or assisting in developing motor skills in a person with a developmental disability. Read more here…
MUSIC’S HEALING POWER GAINS TRACTION
A brain-imaging study done at Stanford University used classical music by a somewhat obscure 18th-century English composer named William Boyce to measure how 17 people in their late teens and 20s responded. All were right-handed (the rarer lefty brain may have a different landscape) and had little or no musical training and no knowledge of Boyce’s work. Read more here….
Experience sacred chants, music therapy, and Vedic astrology in Tahoe City
Dr. Hari Haran says his music is purely classical on traditional instruments which will not disturb the balance and equilibrium of your mind, and is very effective for healing ailments like blood pressure, nervous disorder, body pain, migraine, rheumatics, stress, anger, depression, heart ailments, sleepless-ness, and autism. Read more here…
Wounded warriors ‘SOAR,’ find strength through music therapy

To many Soldiers, the acronym SOAR represents Special Operations Aviation Regiment. For Soldiers in the Wounded Transition Battalion it is the Sounds of Acoustic Recovery music program. Read more here…
Study Finds Music Therapy Can Reduce the Need for Sedatives
San Francisco, CA — (SBWIRE) — 05/30/2013 — The Ohio State University medical study focused on patients hospitalized in intensive care units on mechanical ventilators. Another music therapy study is being done at St. Louis University Cancer Center for patients with cancer who are receiving chemotherapy treatments, radiation therapy, and are recovering from surgery. Read more here…
Medical: Music’s healing power scores more evidence

A brain-imaging study done at Stanford University used classical music by a somewhat obscure 18th-century English composer named William Boyce to measure how 17 people in their late teens and 20s responded. All were right-handed (the rarer lefty brain may have a different landscape) and had little or no musical training and no knowledge of Boyce’s work. Read more here…
The unborn child, human touch, and music therapy

“Many NICUs are noisy, or people put on random lullabies that are recorded. What we’re saying is, it’s not just any old lullaby that’s recorded, it’s the power of the parent’s voice synchronized therapeutically . . . and the other two sounds that can have a therapeutic benefit.” Read more here…
Music Therapy helps soothe, comfort patients

Those are the most powerful days for me as a therapist, when I go in to see a patient and they’re really down, and then when the music starts you just see that spark,” Nelson says. Read more here…
They Could Have Been Aborted, But Music Therapy Helps Premature Infants

Premature infants — who, if in utero, could be legally aborted — are the recipients of a new music therapy designed to engage their sense of hearing at a time when they are so fragile that they often cannot even be held or caressed by their parents. A recent report from the Associated Press suggests that, like all other humans, preemies can be soothed by gentle music, especially when they are serenaded live in their hospital rooms. Read more here…