Frequently Asked Questions about Therapeutic Music
What does a therapeutic Musician do?
A therapeutic musician uses the inherent healing elements of live music and sound to enhance the environment for
patients in healthcare settings, making it more conducive to the human healing process.
What is the difference between a music therapist and a therapeutic musician?
The music therapistuses musical
instruments and music making as therapeutic tools primarily to rehabilitate the normal functions of living and improve quality of life through studying
and promoting measurable changes in behavior. A therapeutic musician uses the artistic application of the intrinsic elements
of live music and sound to provide an environment conducive to the human healing process.
Therapeutic music is
an art based on the science of sound. It is live acoustic music, played or sung, specifically tailored to the patient’s
immediate need, which brings music’s intrinsic healing value to the bedside of the ailing.
What does healing mean?
We define healing as movement toward mental, physical, emotional and spiritual wholeness.
Who benefits from therapeutic music?
Those who commonly benefit
are persons experiencing life’s transitions such as birthing and dying, and those experiencing terminal illness, injury,
chronic illness and/or disease.Music may affect the listener physiologically,
emotionally, mentally, and/or spiritually.
Therapeutic musicians work in a wide variety of healthcare
settings. They work primarily at the bedside of patients in clinical environments including hospice, hospitals, high
skilled nursing facilities, treatment centers and nursing homes. In the hospital they may work in areas that include pre-op, recovery, ambulatory care, ER,
SICU, ICU, NICU, pediatric and psychiatric units.
Who is qualified to practice therapeutic music?
Persons who complete the approved therapeutic musician curricula and independent study from an accredited
training program are qualified to practice as therapeutic
musicians.
What is the National Standards Board for Therapeutic Musicians?
The National Standards Board for Therapeutic Musicians is a governing body for accredited programs that graduate therapeutic
musicians. Its purpose is the development and advancement of the profession of bedside therapeutic music.
What are some misconceptions about therapeutic music?
A common misconception is that there
is only one type, or style, of music that is beneficial for all patients. This is false. Each patient has unique needs, and
the patient circumstances determine the type of music used. Other misconceptions are that therapeutic musicians
are para-music therapists, merely entertainers, or have not received sufficient training. These are all false. Therapeutic musicians are certified through extensive training programs, which
provide high-quality training and hold high standards for each graduate.
Is there research to support therapeutic music?
Although the documented effects of music on mood
and physiology date back to the ancient Greeks and more recently to the Renaissance, today the effectiveness of music as a
healing modality has been well documented in music therapy, music-medicine, nursing, psychology, and scientific literature.
Recently several controlled studies have been published which demonstrate the efficacy
of live, therapeutic music in decreasing pain and anxiety and regulating heart rhythms.
Each healthcare facility funds therapeutic music differently. Funds may come out of a particular department's
budget, or from the facility's foundation, auxiliary, special fund, or through a grant. Many therapeutic musicians work as
employees and in private practice.
How is therapeutic music practiced in hospice?
Therapeutic
music is used in hospice to provide support for the physical, emotional, spiritual and mental conditions of the dying and
their loved ones.
What is a typical therapeutic music session like?
The therapeutic musician is trained
to assess the patient’s behavior, condition and communication in order to meet the patient’s immediate need with
appropriate therapeutic music.
What is the future of therapeutic music?
Since the inception of the therapeutic music field in the early 1990s, hundreds of well-trained and certified graduates
are serving humanity and making a difference in the "comfort care" of the patients. An increasing number of healthcare facility administrators recognize the benefits
that therapeutic music brings to their patients.