Music Listening to Decrease Intensity of Agitated Behaviour After Severe Acquired Brain Injury: An Experimental Multi-case Study
Journal
Music and Medicine (Online)
Year
2021
Abstract
Agitated behavior following a traumatic brain injury is frequent, placing patients and staff at risk of injury. Such behaviors decrease rehabilitation outcomes. This case study explores staff-administered listening to preferred music as an intervention to reduce agitated behavior during sub-acute rehabilitation. The study included seven patients (6♂/1♀, aged 21-74 years) with agitated behaviour and suffering from severe acquired brain injury of different aetiologies. The intervention included 15 minutes of preferred music from a customized playlist created in collaboration between a relative, a music therapist and the staff at the rehabilitation clinic. Agitated Behavior Scale (ABS)-scores, blood pressure and heart rate measurements were obtained pre and post interventions. Two tailed t-test and visual analyses were conducted. Results suggest that listening to personalized playlists of preferred music with a supportive intensity profile may reduce the intensity of agitated behavior following an acquired brain injury in the sub-acute phase. Furthermore, the music listening intervention may have contributed to reduced pulse. Due to the small sample size and few measurements, further research to support the hypothesis is recommended. However, since music listening is an easily administered low-cost intervention with no obvious side-effects, it can be considered as a supplement to usual treatment.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Agitation; Behavioral State; Inpatient Rehabilitation; Music Listening; Music Therapy; Observational Measures; Physiological Measures; Receptive Music Methods; Traumatic Brain Injury
Indexed Terms
Rehabilitation; Intervention; Listening; Case studies; Behavior; Traumatic brain injury; Medical disorders
Study Type
Quasi-Experimental Study; Quantitative Methods
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Aadal, L., Hald, S. V., Setterberg, U. J., & Bonde, L. O. (2021). Music Listening to Decrease Intensity of Agitated Behaviour After Severe Acquired Brain Injury: An Experimental Multi-case Study. Music and Medicine (Online), 13 (1), 68. Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/1700