Harnessing music therapy and music medicine in chronic respiratory disease management
Harnessing music therapy and music medicine in chronic respiratory disease management
Introduction: Treatment options for those living with chronic respiratory disease include non-pharmacological therapies to maximize outcomes. However, some individuals are limited by their symptoms, which inhibit their ability to benefit to an equivalent or expected level. Both music therapy and music medicine are therapeutic approaches which could address these limitations. Areas covered: This perspective reviews the clinical effects of music therapy and music medicine in chronic respiratory diseases. This considers active music therapy methods of re-creating (group singing), improvisation (instrument playing), receptive music listening and music medicine, with a specific focus at rest and during exercise. Expert commentary: The precise role of music therapy or music medicine as an adjunct to exercise testing or structured exercise programs for people with chronic respiratory disease is unclear. Choice of music (for background or individual use for this purpose) requires input from participants and would benefit from music therapists to guide selection. While preliminary findings of group singing and instrument playing highlight some efficacy, their role in comparison to pulmonary rehabilitation requires further clarification. At present, these music therapy and music medicine approaches can be considered as adjunct therapies which may assist in managing symptoms and improving wellbeing alongside existing management strategies.
Instrument, music listening, respiratory disorders; singing, vocal
639-654
Lee, Annemarie Louise
fe9d7ee0-499b-41b4-b5e8-938bffdb099b
Clark, Imogen Nicola
c8bdfe0b-8af1-4b5e-8ca0-cf95c04f991b
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
July 2025
Lee, Annemarie Louise
fe9d7ee0-499b-41b4-b5e8-938bffdb099b
Clark, Imogen Nicola
c8bdfe0b-8af1-4b5e-8ca0-cf95c04f991b
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
Lee, Annemarie Louise, Clark, Imogen Nicola and Lewis, Adam
(2025)
Harnessing music therapy and music medicine in chronic respiratory disease management.
Expert Review of Respiratory Medicine, 19 (7), .
(doi:10.1080/17476348.2025.2501279).
Abstract
Introduction: Treatment options for those living with chronic respiratory disease include non-pharmacological therapies to maximize outcomes. However, some individuals are limited by their symptoms, which inhibit their ability to benefit to an equivalent or expected level. Both music therapy and music medicine are therapeutic approaches which could address these limitations. Areas covered: This perspective reviews the clinical effects of music therapy and music medicine in chronic respiratory diseases. This considers active music therapy methods of re-creating (group singing), improvisation (instrument playing), receptive music listening and music medicine, with a specific focus at rest and during exercise. Expert commentary: The precise role of music therapy or music medicine as an adjunct to exercise testing or structured exercise programs for people with chronic respiratory disease is unclear. Choice of music (for background or individual use for this purpose) requires input from participants and would benefit from music therapists to guide selection. While preliminary findings of group singing and instrument playing highlight some efficacy, their role in comparison to pulmonary rehabilitation requires further clarification. At present, these music therapy and music medicine approaches can be considered as adjunct therapies which may assist in managing symptoms and improving wellbeing alongside existing management strategies.
Text
ERRX-2025--0047.R1
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Restricted to Repository staff only until 5 May 2026.
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 May 2025
Published date: July 2025
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords:
Instrument, music listening, respiratory disorders; singing, vocal
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 501654
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501654
ISSN: 1747-6348
PURE UUID: cfcccb53-e946-4c07-8201-75afb4dbdfaa
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Date deposited: 04 Jun 2025 17:15
Last modified: 03 Sep 2025 02:11
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Contributors
Author:
Annemarie Louise Lee
Author:
Imogen Nicola Clark
Author:
Adam Lewis
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