Special Care Unit music therapy groups
The residents in the Special Care Unit are in the
latter stages of the debilitating conditions of Alzheimer’s
Disease and Dementia. The use of vocal and song improvisation, as
well as music listening engage residents in musical experiences. When
residents’ physical condition and their effective use of language
as communication have decreased significantly, spontaneous vocalizations,
movement, and gestures become the primary means of communication and
relationship through the music. The connections between residents
and the therapist happen in musical moments within improvisations,
piano compositions or popular songs. Residents’ vocalizations,
gestures, facial expressions, and body movements become the creative
inspirations of the therapist’s musical choices and improvisations.
Assisted Living and Adult Day Program music
therapy groups
For the residents in the Assisted Living and Adult
Day Program at the Waveny Center, improvisational music therapy groups
allow residents to find their individual and unique ways into a musical
experience, to use the music to express themselves, and to relate
to one another. The group members use percussion and melodic instruments
such as drums, bells, xylophones, and their voices to spontaneously
create music with the therapist. At the piano, the therapist supports,
enhances, responds, and integrates the members’ music. The members’
sounds, musical impulses, and ideas determine the aesthetic character
and reflect the dynamics of the group in music. Mutuality and human
contact are beacons for music–making in the group setting.
The approach is client-centered as well as music-centered.
Each member’s musical contribution is regarded as vital and
becomes part of a whole. Whatever the degree of impairment or psychological
difficulty, every resident has the innate capacity to be part of the
creative process. The therapist works to render music-making accessible
to the client, through musical and practical considerations, and always
through an open presence and regard toward the group. Through the
music, the therapist works to foster group cohesion, guiding and supporting
each member’s self-expression in relationship to the group.
Individual experiences in music are recognized by the group members
through music’s universal properties which resonate with all
human experience. In group work, contrasting musical expressions can
co-exist and interact simultaneously, and create the ever-shifting
forms and qualities of the music.
Clients who have a diminished capacity to communicate,
come together in a creative process to produce a continuous and audible
art form, through which they can hear themselves and others, and experience
a sense of immediate awareness and human connection. Depression, confusion,
anger, irritability, anxiety, emotional difficulties associated with
change or loss, and an impaired capacity to communicate and relate
to others, are among a number of presenting issues for persons living
with Alzheimer’s or dementia. As part of the healing process
for these clients, participation in an improvisational music therapy
group fosters: