Feeling Groovy Music Therapy

It does not take an expert in either music or the mind to recommend a hot bath and some Pachelbel to help cure a mild case of stress. But a growing body of research being done around the world suggests there is a far stronger link than was previously thought between mental and physical health, and music.

Music therapy that encourages patients to express themselves by joining in and playing musical instruments has had well-documented success with people suffering from dementia, adults and children with learning difficulties, and in palliative care.

But the notion that simply listening to certain kinds of music can also have a significant effect not only on mood but on medically verifiable health is one that is generating increasing interest. There are those who suggest that in the treatment of some kinds of illness, a dose of the right music avoids the need for drug treatment altogether.

The power to heal is also the power to make money, and therapists, musicians and technicians succeeding in this field are not leaving the complex subject of intellectual property (IP) rights to chance.

Twice a day, after meals

Ms. Vera Brandes, a respected Austrian music producer, composer and academic, describes herself as the first "musical pharmacologist." The company she co-founded, Sanoson, plans to launch a prescription-only course of music therapy she believes is so powerful in the treatment of disorders such as depression, that doctors may see it as a real alternative to drugs. The treatment will be available initially in Austria but later in other European countries and in the U.S. Patients will be given specially produced listening devices and a headset programmed with selected pieces of music. Their prescription tells them when to listen, and how often.

Director of the research program in music and medicine at the Paracelsus Private Medical University in Salzburg, Ms. Brandes says the music prescribed was composed by her and her team and is based on research on the neurological effects of different musical stimuli. The fact that patients tend to like the therapy makes them more likely to stick with it, she says - unlike psychotherapy, which has a high drop-out rate. "It does involve time," she says. "Patients have to have at least half an hour a day when they can do this and nothing else, so it's more time-consuming than taking a pill, but not more time-consuming than seeing a psychiatrist."

Listening therapy is also at the heart of the launch in the U.S. this year of an Internet-based service by music research company Sourcetone. Director of marketing Luis Araten-Castilla says the company has been studying the effects of music on the mind for five years, working with scientists at Harvard Medical School.

The web service - currently available only in the U.S., although the company has global aspirations - allows users to listen to streamed music of their choice...

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