Music as a Therapy: Role in Psychiatry

Journal

Asian Journal of Psychiatry

Year

2013

Volume

6

Issue

3

First Page

193

Last Page

9

Abstract

Music is popularly believed to usher in bliss and serenity, and healing is considered its natural quality. It has an emotionally charging charisma of its own, that we all as listeners might have experienced at times. Music has been there with mankind since the beginning of history, but where does it stand as a therapy? Is there any evidence base? How this therapy came into being and how it has evolved, and what the old and current research says about its role in psychiatric disorders. This review tries to explore these questions and arrives at a conclusion that music certainly promises more than just entertainment, and evidence so far suggests music therapy can be beneficial in the treatment of psychiatric disorders, as a cost effective noninvasive adjunct to standard therapy in a variety of settings and patient groups, yet more validated scientific research is still required to establish it as a sole quantified therapy.

Music and Health Institute Terms

Mental Health; Music Listening; Music Medicine; Recorded Music Listening; Wellness and Well-Being

Indexed Terms

Animals; History, 20th Century; History, Ancient; Mental Disorders; Mice; Neurosecretory Systems

Study Type

Editorials, Opinions, Position Papers

Disciplines

Psychiatric and Mental Health

PubMed ID

23642975

Document Type

Article

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