Implementing Music Therapy Through Telehealth: Considerations for Military Populations

Author: Rebecca Vaudreuil, Diane G Langston, Wendy L Magee, Donna Betts, Sara Kass, Charles Levy
Affiliation:
1 Creative Forces-NEA Military Healing Arts Network, National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, DC, USA.
2 Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Malcom Randall VA Hospital, Gainesville, FL, USA.
3 Boyer College of Music and Dance, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Conference/Journal: Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol
Date published: 07/01/2020
Other: Pages: 1-10 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1080/17483107.2020.1775312. , Word Count: 329


Purpose: Telehealth provides psychotherapeutic interventions and psychoeducation for remote populations with limited access to in-person behavioural health and/or rehabilitation treatment. The United States Department of Défense and the Veterans Health Administration use telehealth to deliver primary care, medication management, and services including physical, occupational, and speech-language therapies for service members, veterans, and eligible dependents. While creative arts therapies are included in telehealth programming, the existing evidence base focuses on art therapy and dance/movement therapy, with a paucity of information on music therapy.Methods: Discussion of didactic and applied music experiences, clinical, ethical, and technological considerations, and research pertaining to music therapy telehealth addresses this gap through presentation of three case examples. These programmes highlight music therapy telehealth with military-connected populations on a continuum of clinical and community engagement: 1) collaboration between Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA and the Acoke Rural Development Initiative in Lira, Uganda; 2) the Semper Sound Cyber Health programme in San Diego, CA; and 3) the integration of music therapy telehealth into Creative Forces®, an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts. Results: These examples illustrate that participants were found to positively respond to music therapy and community music engagement through telehealth, and reported decrease in pain, anxiety, and depression; they endorsed that telehealth was not a deterrent to continued music engagement, requested continued music therapy telehealth sessions, and recommended it to their peers. Conclusions: Knowledge gaps and evolving models of creative arts therapies telehealth for military-connected populations are elucidated, with emphasis on clinical and ethical considerations.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONMusic therapy intervention can be successfully adapted to accommodate remote facilitation.Music therapy telehealth has yielded positive participant responses including decrease in pain, anxiety, and depression.Telehealth facilitation is not a deterrent to continued music engagement.Distance delivery of music through digital platforms can support participants on a clinic to community continuum.

KEYWORDS: Music therapy; community reintegration; creative arts therapies; military; posttraumatic stress disorder; service members; telehealth; telemedicine; traumatic brain injury; veterans.

PMID: 32608282 DOI: 10.1080/17483107.2020.1775312

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