Music Therapy
        
        
          
            Treatment Overview
            
               
            
            Music therapy is the use of music to gain physical and emotional healing and wellness. A trained and certified music therapist can provide music therapy. Therapy sessions can involve listening to music, music-making, or both. Music-making is a healthy way of expressing yourself. 
           
          
            
            
            Why It Is Done
            You can use music therapy to help your mental and physical health. It helps people express themselves, find new memories, and calm the body and mind through its rhythm, order, and predictability. Music therapy is sometimes combined with movement therapies, such as dance. 
            Music therapy: 
            
              - May decrease forgetfulness (dementia) by: - Improving your connection to others. 
- Helping the brain produce a calming substance (melatonin). 
- Improving how well you speak. 
- Improving long-term and medium-term memory. 
 
- May help children deal with necessary but painful procedures. Crying is often affected by music. 
- Is used to reduce the pain of cancer treatment. 
 
          
            
            
            How Well It Works
            Research is beginning to reveal how music works to heal the body and mind.footnote 1 The rhythm and tone of music can excite you or relax you. Music therapy can help reduce your heart rate and blood pressure and increase your ability to think, learn, reason, and remember. 
           
          
            
            
            Risks
            Music therapy is considered safe.
           
          
          
            
            
            References
            
              Citations
              
                - 
                  
                  Freeman L (2009). Physiologic pathways of mind-body communication. In L Freeman, ed., Mosby's Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Research-Based Approach, 3rd ed., pp. 1–29. St. Louis: Mosby Elsevier.
           
          
            
            
            Credits
            
              
                
                  Current as of:  July 31, 2024
               
              
             
           
         
        
        
          
            
              Current as of: July 31, 2024
           
          
         
        
          Freeman L (2009). Physiologic pathways of mind-body communication. In L Freeman, ed., Mosby's Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Research-Based Approach, 3rd ed., pp. 1–29. St. Louis: Mosby Elsevier.