Gallagher, L.M., Lagman, R., & Rybicki, L. (2018). Outcomes of music therapy interventions on symptom management in palliative medicine patients. American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care, 35, 250–257.
Data was collected on admitted palliative medicine patients receiving music therapy from September 2000 to May 2012. A board-certified music therapist (MT-BC) on the unit conducted music therapy sessions with individual palliative medicine patients and family members present. Multiple goals may have been addressed at a single session, using a variety of live patient-preferred musical interventions. Interventions included six main categories—music listening, verbal/cognitive participation, vocal participation, physical participation, verbal/emotional participation, and music-assisted relaxation. Symptom evaluations from patients included pre- and post-session severity of pain, depression, anxiety and shortness of breath. Data collected on patients included standardized music therapy assessment, elements of standardized music therapy, clinical note, patient related information, patient goals for the session, interventions used by the music therapist, symptom evaluations from patients, behavioral evaluations from the therapist, music used, patient and family member reactions, and narratives.
This is a retrospective study of data collected on palliative medicine patients admitted from September 2000 to May 2012 who participated in music therapy sessions.
Statistically significant reduction improvement in pre- and post-session mean scores were reported for all measurements (p < 0.001) except body movement (p = 0.16). However, the percentage of patients who achieved the clinical significant threshold ranged from 0.7% to 66.2%. Outcomes with the highest percentage of patients with clinically relevant improvement were mood (66.2%), vocalization (58.7%), and facial expression (55.6%). Only 12.3% of patients experienced any clinically relevant improvement. 96% of participants had an overall positive verbal response to the session versus 4% of participants that experienced an ambivalent or no verbal response. Patients who listed pain, depression, anxiety, shortness of breath, or mood as a goal for music therapy achieved the most improvement in these symptoms. Vocalization seemed to have significantly improved when verbal/emotional intervention was used and when distraction was a goal of music therapy. There was no impact on patient demographic or cancer diagnosis on outcomes.
Music therapy does appear to have a positive effect on symptoms of dyspnea and should be considered as an adjunct to current standard interventions. However, more research is needed to determine the degree of clinical benefit of music therapy in the improvement of dyspnea, as well as its cost-effectiveness and duration effect.
Music therapy should be considered as an adjunct to current standard interventions for dyspnea.