counter customizable free hit

 

 

 

 

 

Music therapy might soften Depression symptoms
 
 


Home
Up
Activity Fights Distress
Aging Mental Health
Alcohol Dependency Link
Altitude Suicide Risk
Anxiety, Depression Common
Anxiety Disorder
Assisted Living Residents
Avoid Christmas Blues
Body Clock Depression Link
Beat Wintertime Blues
Behavioral Spending Down
Being More Thankful
Brain Inflammation, Depression
Brain Stimulation
Burnout Test
Changing Personality Option
Combination Treatments
Creativity, Mental Health
Depression Benefit
Depression Causes
Depression, Chocolate
Depression, Miigraine Link
Diabetes and Depression
Eating Disorders
Elderly Depression
Elderly Self-Esteem Lowers
Emotions, Stress Reaction
End Negative Thoughts
Epilepsy Drug, Suicide
Healthy Pessimism
Heart Patients Stress
Holiday Suicide
Immingrant Mental Health
Late Life Depression
Mental Health Factors
Mental Health, Heart
Mental Health Help
Mental Health Nuanaces
Mental Health Stigma
Mental Illness Myths
Mental Health Woes
Migrane, Depression Link
Music Therapy Works
Opportunity for Recovery
Pain, Depression Link
Power of Emotions
Severe Depression
Stress Resilience
Suicide Prevention
Support Groups Helpful
Tai Chi Eases Depression
Therapist Checkup
Timely Diagnosis
Underserved Elderly
Urban Psychosis
Women's Depression, Weight
Women, PTSD
Women Suicide Attempts

Home
Addiction
Arthritis, Bones
Alzheimer's Disease
Blood Pressure News
Cancer Developments
Chronic Pain, Disease
Cirrhosis Impact
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
diabetes_news
Dietary for Seniors
Elderly Oral Health
Middle-Age Weight Gain
Exercise News
Flu Season
Hearing
Heart & Stroke News
Kidney News, Information
Hormone Boost No Threat
Mental Health
Parkinson's News
Foot Ulcers Threat
Respiratory Health
Seniors' Vision
Smile Measures Beauty
Vitamins, Nutrients
Whooping Cough Vaccine

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

Music therapy might soften Depression symptoms

Newswise — Music therapy might help ease the symptoms of depression, though its effectiveness as a stand-alone intervention is not certain, according to a recent review of five small studies.

 

Four of the studies found reduced depression symptoms in participants receiving music therapy compared to those who did not. The fifth study did not find any difference.

The benefits of music appeared greatest when providers used theory-based therapeutic techniques rather than “winging it.”

“In the four studies where there was an impact, there was a very coherent theoretical framework, a very coherent explanation of what went on in the session and obvious reasons why the therapists were there,” said lead author Anna Maratos.

“In the study that showed no effect, there didn’t seem to be any theoretical underpinning to the intervention. We have no idea why the therapist was there, really.”

Therapeutic interventions included listening to music in groups, body movement and painting to music, and improvised singing.

The review appears in the most recent issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates medical research.

 

Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.

Maratos, head of profession for Arts Therapies at the Central and Northwest London NHS Foundation Trust, and colleagues looked for randomized controlled trials that compared music therapy with other, more traditional interventions for depression. They found a dearth of rigorous research.

Because there was little or no uniformity in study approaches, study populations or therapeutic techniques, the researchers did not pool the results for meta-analysis.

Maratos said that although the fifth study did not meet reviewers’ eligibility criteria, it was included because it was the only study with a certified professional coordinating the sessions.

The reviewers defined music therapy as an intervention designed to improve health status that included musical interaction between therapist and patient within a structured theoretical framework and in which outcomes were born of music, talk inspired by music or therapeutic relationships.

Each study author determined his or her own definition of standard care, on the other hand, which included pharmacological, routine hospital and cognitive therapeutic treatment.

Three studies focused on adults aged 60 and older; one study looked at adults between ages 21 and 65; and one focused on 14- and 15-year-old adolescents.

Although the studies did not show a definitive cause-and-effect relationship between music therapy and clinical improvement in depression, the authors found a positive correlation.

They attributed the unevenness of the studies’ results to the varied uses of music by therapists in the studies and the relative weakness of some researchers’ methods.

The researchers found unusually high levels of participation and compliance among patients receiving the interventions.

Shara Sand, Psy.D., clinical assistant professor of psychology at Yeshiva University in New York City, agreed with researchers’ conclusion that meta-analysis was not possible in the review, but said that the evidence of music’s influence on mood makes the research question interesting.

“It does make me wonder: What is standardized treatment [in music therapy]? There’s really a whole avenue of research that should be done,” Sand said.

She adding that music therapy broadens the range of interventions available to people who might shy away from traditional approaches: “There’s often an isolation and alienation; a difficulty connecting and with relatedness” for people with depression, and the music therapy might offer a less threatening option.

Maratos said that her own status as a licensed music therapist spurred her interest in doing the review and added that music therapy is a state-sanctioned mental health treatment in the United Kingdom.

Maratos AS, et al. Music therapy for depression (Review). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 1.

The Cochrane Collaboration is an international nonprofit, independent organization that produces and disseminates systematic reviews of health care interventions and promotes the search for evidence in the form of clinical trials and other studies of interventions. Visit http://www.cochrane.org for more information.

 

 

 

...
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us