Some Light at the End of the Tunnel': Exploring Users’ Evidence for the Effectiveness of Music Therapy in Adult Mental Health Settings

Journal

Music and Medicine

Year

2010

Abstract

This study responds to the current demand for evidence of the effectiveness of music therapy in adult psychiatric care and rehabilitation. The qualitative, idiographic, and user-based perspective of the study also responds to the growing requirement that ‘‘evidence-based practice’’ take into account patients’ needs, experiences, and evaluations of services. The study is based on verbal data from 19 patients with chronic mental health problems who completed at least 10 individual sessions of professional music therapy in a London mental health unit. In-depth analysis of semistructured interviews using interpretive phenomenological analysis elicits patients’ experiences of the process of music therapy and its varied benefits for them in relation to their symptoms, coping strategies, and overall quality of life. The data suggest how the approach to music therapy taken in this situation often works in relation to users’ long-standing relationship to music, as expressed through their ‘‘music-health-illness narratives.’’ Participation in music therapy has benefits in itself but can also help reestablish patients’ ongoing use of music as a health-promoting resource and coping strategy in their lives. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Music and Health Institute Terms

Coping; Hospital Setting; Hospitalized Patients; Interviews; Mental Health; Music Listening; Music Therapy; Psychological Outcomes; Quality of Life; Recorded Music Listening; Wellness and Well-Being

Indexed Terms

mental health settings; therapy effectiveness; psychiatric care; rehabilitation; evidence based practice; Mental Health; Psychiatric Units; Treatment Effectiveness Evaluation; Strategies

Study Type

Phenomenological Study; Qualitative Methods

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS