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Music therapy for premature infants and their parents: an integrative review
407
Citations
70
References
2012
Year
MusicChild PsychologyPremature InfantsNeonatologyAbstract Music TherapyMusic CognitionEarly Childhood DevelopmentPediatricsAudiologyIntegrative ReviewEducationGlobal Developmental DelayNewborn MedicinePaediatric MedicineMedicineChild Development
Abstract Music therapy in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is a young but globally expanding field of interdisciplinary interest. This integrative review provides a comprehensive as well as method-overriding, interdisciplinary critical overview of empirical results on music therapy with premature infants and their parents in neonatal care covering evidence from 43 articles between 1970 and 2010. The research outcomes illustrate that music therapy seems to be beneficial for premature infants, especially in terms of pacification and stabilization. It also emphasizes that the premature infants' perceptive faculties and capabilities are actively engaged in music therapy to a greater extent than has been recognized in the literature thus far. However, some authors caution against the potential danger of over stimulating the premature infant and therefore recommend professional use of music therapy and general awareness in this sensible field. So far, research has predominantly focused on the short-term influence of recorded stimulations on the premature infant with quantitative designs. Future research should include active music therapy approaches, an in-depth analysis of the therapeutic process, the parents' perspective, as well as qualitative, mixed-methods, multi-center, and longitudinal designs to gain a deeper understanding of the advantages and limitations of music therapy in the NICU. Keywords: music therapypremature infantsparentsNICUintegrative review Acknowledgments I thank Prof. Dr. D. Aldridge for his support as my doctoral supervisor and my husband, Dr. J. Haslbeck, for his scientific and personal support. Jen Sholtis read and commented on the manuscript, for which I am grateful. This publication was supported in part by the German foundation “Evangelische Studienstiftung Villigst.” Parts of the material of this article were presented inter alia at the 2009 Annual Conference of the American Music Therapy Association, San Diego, California; the 12th World Congress of the World Association for Infant Mental Health, Leipzig, Germany, in July 2010 and the 3rd International Congress for Interdisciplinary Music Effect Research, Krems, Austria in November 2010. Notes 1Find list of hospitals with NICU music therapy service form around the world at: http://www.currentsinmusic.com/2010/02/35-hospitals-with-nicu-music-therapy-programs-around-the-world/ 2Compare definition of the World Federation of Music Therapy at: http://musictherapyworld.net/WFMT/President_presents…_files/President%20presents…5-2011.pdf last accessed February 14th, 2012 Additional informationNotes on contributorsFriederike Barbara Haslbeck Appendices to this article are available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08098131.2011.648653
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