Resource-oriented Music Therapy for Psychiatric Patients With Low Therapy Motivation: Protocol for a Randomised Controlled Trial [NCT00137189]

Journal

BMC Psychiatry

Year

2005

Volume

5

First Page

39

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous research has shown positive effects of music therapy for people with schizophrenia and other mental disorders. In clinical practice, music therapy is often offered to psychiatric patients with low therapy motivation, but little research exists about this population. The aim of this study is to examine whether resource-oriented music therapy helps psychiatric patients with low therapy motivation to improve negative symptoms and other health-related outcomes. An additional aim of the study is to examine the mechanisms of change through music therapy. METHODS: 144 adults with a non-organic mental disorder (ICD-10: F1 to F6) who have low therapy motivation and a willingness to work with music will be randomly assigned to an experimental or a control condition. All participants will receive standard care, and the experimental group will in addition be offered biweekly sessions of music therapy over a period of three months. Outcomes will be measured by a blind assessor before and 1, 3, and 9 months after randomisation. DISCUSSION: The findings to be expected from this study will fill an important gap in the knowledge of treatment effects for a patient group that does not easily benefit from treatment. The study's close link to clinical practice, as well as its size and comprehensiveness, will make its results well generalisable to clinical practice.

Music and Health Institute Terms

Mental Health; Music Listening; Music Medicine; Psychological Outcomes; Psychotic Disorders; Recorded Music Listening

Indexed Terms

Attitude to Health; Clinical Protocols; Combined Modality Therapy; Follow-Up Studies; International Classification of Diseases; Mental Disorders; Motivation; Norway; Psychotherapeutic Processes; Research Design

Study Type

Quantitative Methods; Randomized Controlled Trial

Disciplines

Psychiatric and Mental Health

PubMed ID

16259626

Document Type

Article

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