Music Therapy Quotes
From  The American Music Therapy Association,
http://www.musictherapy.org/quotes.html

Dr. Oliver Sacks ("Awakenings"):  Dr. Sacks reports that patients with neurological disorders
who cannot talk or move are often able to sing, and sometimes even dance, to music. Its
advocates say music therapy also can help ease the trauma of grieving, lessen depression
and provide an outlet for people who are otherwise withdrawn. <ST. Louis Post Dispatch.

Oliver Sacks, M.D.:     "I regard music therapy as a tool of great power in many neurological
disorders -- Parkinson's and Alzheimer's -- because of its unique capacity to organize or
reorganize cerebral function when it has been damaged."

Barbara Crowe (past president of the National Association for Music Therapy):  "(Music
therapy) can make the difference between withdrawal and awareness, between isolation and
interaction, between chronic pain and comfort -- between demoralization and dignity."


From Cape Breton University, Nova Scotia
http://faculty.uccb.ns.ca/~gcarre/courses/health/music.htm

The Impact of Music Therapy on Alzheimer's Disease Patients
Contributed by Nicole Forgeron (3/99)

Introduction
In Canada, Alzheimer's disease affects 8.0% of the population aged 65 and over, and 34.5%
aged 85 and over. Worldwide, roughly 5.1% of persons aged 65 and older, and 26% of those
aged 85 and over are diagnosed with this disease (Forbes, 1998). Alzheimer's disease (AD)
involves a progressive deterioration of brain cells. Affected individuals experience
intellectual decline (with respect to memory, judgement, language, and decision-making
ability), as well as a number of behavioral disturbances, including withdrawal, depression,
aggression, and agitation. With the progression of Alzheimer's disease comes serious
disorientation, confusion, and anxiety.
Although, currently, there is no definitive cure for AD, alleviation of its associated behavioral
problems can contribute to an improvement in the patients' quality of life, thereby reducing
their stress level. Several treatment interventions have been used to manage, decrease, and
prevent aggressiveness and agitation in people with Alzheimer's disease, the most prevalent
being medication. However, given the negative side-effects of many of the existing drug
treatments, the need for alternative approaches is evident. Music therapy has become an
increasingly popular intervention strategy for Alzheimer's disease patients, particularly for
those in nursing homes who display disruptive behaviors (Clark, Lipe, & Bilbrey, 1998).
How Might Music Influence Behavior
The majority of the existing studies on the effects of music therapy emphasize its therapeutic
role in decreasing agitated behaviors. Music has been introduced into therapy to promote
feelings of acceptance and belonging: playing favorite songs is often used to calm down
anxious AD patients (Beck, 1998).
Alzheimer's disease patients can continue to participate in organized music activities, even
though they exhibit deteriorating levels of functioning; also, Alzheimer's sufferers may be able
to retain musical perception, and learn new information when presented in a musical context.
Hence, music may offer an alternative way of communicating for people with AD, when their
ability to express and interpret language has significantly declined (Brotons & Pickett-Cooper,
1996).

Research Findings
The use and benefits of music therapy is acknowledged in recent literature. A study conducted
by Clark, Lipe, & Bilbrey (1998) examined the effects of recorded, preferred music in
decreasing occurrences of aggressive behavior among Alzheimer's patients during bathing
episodes (the care-giving routine during which disruptive behaviors were reported by nursing
staff to be the most problematic). Eighteen adults, aged 55-95, with severe levels of cognitive
impairment, participated in the study. They were randomly scheduled for observation during
bath-time under either a control (no music) condition or an experimental condition in which
recorded selections of preferred music were played. After a two-week period, participants
reversed conditions. A significant difference was found between the music and no music
condition -- during the music condition, decreases occurred in 12 of the 15 previously
observed aggressive behaviors. Care-givers noticed that, during the music condition,
patients showed improvements in mood, evidenced by an increase in smiling, dancing, and
clapping to the music. Also, some were reported as being more calm and cooperative during
the bathing routine.
Brotons & Pickett-Cooper (1996) investigated the impact of live music therapy in agitation
behavior of Alzheimer's disease patients before, during, and after the music intervention.
Twenty subjects, aged 70-96, from four nursing homes, were used for the analysis. The music
therapy session included different musical activities designed according to the subjects'
functioning ability (e.g. singing, dancing, playing musical games or instruments). Results
indicated that subjects were significantly less agitated during and after music therapy than
before music therapy. Movements and behaviors that were seen as unintentional and
uncontrollable before music therapy now seemed more purposeful, more rhythmical, as
though they were moving with the music. Subjects appeared to gain some control over these
actions. In addition, informal reports from staff proposed that this decrease in agitation
continued for the rest of the afternoon and into evening periods.
Forbes (1998) conducted a systematic overview to summarize research findings for managing
the behavioral problems associated with Alzheimer's disease. The most commonly used form
of intervention was found to be music therapy. A study by Rugneskog et al. (1996) showed that
AD patients ate more when music was played; music also resulted in the subjects eating by
themselves more often. Irritability, anxiety, and depression declined as well. Lindenmuth et al.
(1992) found that music increased the number of hours of productive sleep in people with AD.
Although Forbes rated this investigation as weak, the results remain assuring.
Conclusions
The results of these studies suggest that music therapy may be a creative and effective
behavioral intervention in the management of disruptive behaviors displayed by people with
Alzheimer's disease. Although AD causes progressive brain deterioration, musical activity can
be modified for even the most severely demented patients. Because of the extreme variability
among AD patients, their reactions to intervention strategies may be different. As a result, it is
important to individualize these approaches according to the patients' personal needs.
Further research is needed in this area in order to understand, in greater detail, how music
therapy can work to enhance the lives of people with dementia. However, behavioral
interventions, such as music therapy, have "great potential for improving the quality of life
and well-being of both family caregivers and patients (Beck, 1998, pp. 45-46)".
References
Beck, C. (1998). "Psychosocial and behavioral interventions for Alzheimer's disease patients
and their families." American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 6(2), 41-48.
Brotons, M. and Pickett-Cooper, P. (1996). "The effects of music therapy intervention on
agitation behaviors of Alzheimer's disease patients." Journal of Music Therapy, 33(1), 2-18.
Clark, M., Lipe, A., and Bilbrey, M.(1998). "Use of music to decrease aggressive behaviors in
people with dementia." Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 24(7), 10-17.
Craig, G. (1996). Human Development. 7th ed. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Forbes, D. (1998). "Strategies for managing behavioral symptomatology associated with
dementia of the Alzheimer type: a systematic overview." Canadian Journal of Nursing
Research, 30(2), 67-86.
Web Links of Interest
Canadian Association for Music Therapy: Music Therapy Information
American Psychological Association: Information on Alzheimer's Disease
Here is a small portion of what other's have said about the effects of music in healing:
Sammy   Coulter
So much music...
Just one guy!