Advanced Practice in Medical Music Therapy: Case Reports

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*You can also purchase a print copy of this book at West Music by following this link.*

In this book, examples of advanced practice in music therapy with children and adults with various types of medical conditions or at end of life are presented.

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Advanced Practice in Medical Music Therapy: Case Reports

Edited by Cheryl Dileo

340 pages

In this book, examples of advanced practice in music therapy with children and adults with various types of medical conditions or at end of life are presented.

Dedication iii 

Acknowledgements iv 

Contributors viii 

Chapter 1………………………………………………………………….1 

Introduction: Definitions and Perspectives on Advanced Practice in Medical Music Therapy 

Cheryl Dileo (USA) 

Part I: Infants, Children and Adolescents 

Chapter 2……………………………………………………………………..20 

Empowerment and Empowering Self: Using Creative Music Therapy to Reconnect Premature Infants and Their Mothers. 

Friederike Haslbeck (Switzerland) 

Chapter 3 …………………………………………………………………….32 

Dancing on the Couches: Interactive Music Therapy (IMT) with Children and Teenagers during Hemodialysis Sessions 

Lia Rejane Mendes Barcellos (Brazil) 

Chapter 4……………………………………………………………………..46 

“Working with the Negatives to Make a Better Picture:” Creating Hip-Hop Songs in Pediatric Rehabilitation 

Michael Viega (USA) 

Chapter 5……………………………………………………………………..61 

The Girl Who Awoke with No Voice: The Use of Music-Facilitated Dramatic Play for a Child Requiring Unforeseen Tracheotomy. 

Claire M. Ghetti (USA) 

Chapter 6 …………………………………………………………………….74 

In the Light of Day: A Real-World Perspective on Childhood Severe Traumatic Brain Injury and Music Therapy during Early Neurosurgical Rehabilitation 

Simon Gilbertson (Norway) 

Chapter 7……………………………………………………………………..84 

Better Together: Incorporating Family Dynamics in Pediatric Music Therapy Elizabeth Harman and Kathryn Yeager Bruno (USA) 

Chapter 8……………………………………………………………………..96 

“If I Were a Butterfly:” Expanding Experience and Opportunity for a Child and His Family 

Kathryn Lindenfelser (USA) 

Chapter 9……………………………………………………………………..106 

The Use of a Music Therapy Plurimodal Approach in a Process with a Young Girl with a Brain Tumor 

Mayra Hugo and Diego Schapira (Uruguay, Argentina) 

Part II: Adults 

Chapter 10…………………………………………………………………….117 

Limited Approximations: Music-Imaginative Pain Treatment (Entrainment) with a 45-year-old Patient Suffering from Schizoaffective Psychosis 

Susanne Metzner and Sylvia Kunkel (Germany) 

Chapter 11…………………………………………………………………138 

Swimming with the Tides: A Woman’s Struggle to Navigate the Turbulent Waters of Cancer through the Bonny Method of Guided Imagery and Music 

Brian Abrams (USA) 

Chapter 12…………………………………………………………………….149 

“And Suddenly There Was a Loud Ringing in My Ear” The Treatment of Recent Onset Tinnitus with Music Therapy 

Elisabeth Hutter, Miriam Grapp, and Heike Argstatter (Germany) 

Chapter 13……………………………………………………………………..159 

Heart’s Work: Relaxing and Infilling as Integral to Sustained Forward Movement. GIM in Cardiac Rehabilitation 

Alison Short (Australia) 

Chapter 14…………………………………………………………………….174 

“We’ve Had Enough Sad – Shut Up and Listen to Me!” Group Music Therapy with Women Who Have Breast Cancer 

Stephanie Thompson (Australia) 

Chapter 15…………………………………………………………………….184 

Finding a Voice: Singing with Men with Quadriplegia 

Jeanette Tamplin (Australia) 

Chapter 16…………………………………………………………………….194 

Regaining a True Self through Music: GIM with a Woman with Fibromyalgia Esperanza Torres (Spain) 

Chapter 17…………………………………………………………………….209 

Medical Music Therapy with a Young Woman Treated for Acute Myeloid Leukemia: A Family Systems Approach 

John F. Mondanaro (USA) 

Chapter 18……………………………………………………………………218 

Analytical Group Music Therapy (AMT): A Non-Prescriptive, Evidence-Based Approach to Pain Management with Adult Clients in Recovery from Medical Trauma 

Benedikte Scheiby (USA) 

Chapter 19……………………………………………………………………232 

A Journey to Memories: Improvisational Music Therapy in the Neurological Rehabilitation of a Woman with an Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) 

Wolfgang Schmid (Norway) 

Chapter 20…………………………………………………………………….239 

Interactive Music Therapy with Parents/Relatives of Babies Admitted to a Neonatology Unit 

Martha Negreiros-Vianna, Albelino Silva Carvalhaes, Arnaldo Prata Barbos (Brazil) 

Chapter 21…………………………………………………………………….249 

‘Love… Actually:’ Music and Absolute Attention 

Nigel Hartley (England) 

Chapter 22…………………………………………………………………….261 

Sarah’s Lament: Exploring the Narratives of Music, Medicine and Aesthetics 

Colin Lee (Canada) 

Chapter 23…………………………………………………………………….273 

Final Moments: The Use of Song in Relationship Completion 

Cheryl Dileo (USA) 

Chapter 24…………………………………………………………………….287 

The ‘Healing’ Groove: Music Therapy with a Cancer Patient at the End of Life 

Gerry Prince (England) 

Chapter 25…………………………………………………………………….294 

Finding the Song of One’s Life: Music Therapy at an Outpatient Palliative Care Service 

Elisabeth Martins Petersen (Brazil) 

Chapter 26…………………………………………………………………….311 

Addressing Horror through Beauty? Music therapy for a Man with Complex Pain at the End of Life 

Deborah Salmon (Canada) 

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