Music therapy in children’s hospices: an evaluative survey of provision
Music therapy in children’s hospices: an evaluative survey of provision
This paper presents the results of a survey of the range of music therapy practice in children's hospices in the UK. Music therapists are challenged to work with children with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions during short periods of respite care over several years or at end of life. Flexibility is fundamental to working both individually and in small groups in response to the shifting needs of the children and their families. In the context of a children's hospice music therapists are called upon to work creatively with siblings and family members and members of the multidisciplinary team in addition to the children themselves. A questionnaire and focus group for music therapists working in the children's hospices provided evidence of the range of work, priorities and future plans for development. Telephone interviews with specialist staff at children's hospices where music therapists were not currently working provided evidence of how music and musical activities were perceived and utilised, with any plans for future provision for a music therapy service and some of the practical and resource issues being itemised.
570-576
Hodkinson, Sarah
dbb67a72-07ff-4547-b47d-ccdabcaee6c8
Bunt, Leslie
198b28fa-a5ad-41cc-99e2-ad1da5954260
Daykin, Norma
84246e53-612a-49eb-a8f1-1f43757ace17
November 2014
Hodkinson, Sarah
dbb67a72-07ff-4547-b47d-ccdabcaee6c8
Bunt, Leslie
198b28fa-a5ad-41cc-99e2-ad1da5954260
Daykin, Norma
84246e53-612a-49eb-a8f1-1f43757ace17
Hodkinson, Sarah, Bunt, Leslie and Daykin, Norma
(2014)
Music therapy in children’s hospices: an evaluative survey of provision.
The Arts in Psychotherapy, 41 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/j.aip.2014.10.006).
Abstract
This paper presents the results of a survey of the range of music therapy practice in children's hospices in the UK. Music therapists are challenged to work with children with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions during short periods of respite care over several years or at end of life. Flexibility is fundamental to working both individually and in small groups in response to the shifting needs of the children and their families. In the context of a children's hospice music therapists are called upon to work creatively with siblings and family members and members of the multidisciplinary team in addition to the children themselves. A questionnaire and focus group for music therapists working in the children's hospices provided evidence of the range of work, priorities and future plans for development. Telephone interviews with specialist staff at children's hospices where music therapists were not currently working provided evidence of how music and musical activities were perceived and utilised, with any plans for future provision for a music therapy service and some of the practical and resource issues being itemised.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 13 October 2014
Published date: November 2014
Organisations:
Music
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Local EPrints ID: 392686
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/392686
ISSN: 0197-4556
PURE UUID: 20e36fab-bfc5-4c4d-86c2-60793ff38c0e
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Date deposited: 29 Apr 2016 11:37
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:50
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Author:
Leslie Bunt
Author:
Norma Daykin
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