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Music therapy can be beneficial for a number of people and different physical and mental health challenges. Here are the types, how it can help and more.
Music has long been more than entertainment. For thousands of years, it’s played a powerful role in healing. Ancient shamans used rhythm and sound to fight illness. Today, nurse practitioners bring ...
Stimulating activities, such as memory games, gentle physical exercises, and music therapy, can help a person with Alzheimer’s maintain cognitive function and potentially delay the progression ...
Art and music therapy enhance the mental and emotional well-being of the elderly by alleviating isolation, reducing anxiety, ...
Formal music therapy encompasses a range of activities, from listening to soothing background music to doing attention-demanding exercises, Pascual-Leone says. And it works because music connects ...
Music therapy plus standard analgesia vs standard care alone reduced pain and anxiety in patients with nontrauma-related pain in the emergency department.
Learn what recreational therapy is, including how it’s different from occupational therapy and more.
Art and music therapy can improve the quality of life for people with Alzheimer's disease. Learn more from WebMD.
The music therapy program at Gateway Academy in Phoenix helps students develop skills and build confidence. "These people get me," one student says.
Research has suggested that music therapy may have a role to play in the follow-up therapy after having a stroke.
First officially introduced to UNC Health in 2018, music therapy is the use of music to achieve clinical therapeutic goals, promote mental health outcomes and provide end-of-life care.