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E-raamat: Music and Dementia: Perspectives on Research and Implementation

Edited by (Cambridge Institute for Music Therapy Research, UK), Edited by (University of Nottingham, UK)
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Providing a range of perspectives from music practitioners, researchers, and people with lived experience of dementia, this comprehensive volume offers latest research into music for people with dementia.



Providing a range of perspectives from music practitioners, researchers, and people with lived experience of dementia, this comprehensive volume offers latest research into music for people with dementia.

Amidst growing concern over public health resourcing and an ageing population, the book explores how the familiar tool of music has been used to ameliorate dementia symptoms and improve quality of life, presenting insights from music therapy, neurology, and the practice of delivering and evaluating music interventions. Written by leading international researchers in the field, chapters look at key frameworks and current science to explore a range of settings such as the impact of music in care homes and hospitals, community singing initiatives, and in-home environments; as well as providing up-to-date research. Chapters take a novel approach, guided by the experiences of music practitioners, scientists, and researchers.

Anchoring scientific knowledge on music and the brain in relation to dementia and cognitive decline to current practice, the book will appeal to scholars, researchers and postgraduate students in the fields of gerontology and ageing, dementia care, and music therapy. Practitioners, therapists, and health care professionals involved with music and older people as well as music for those with dementia may also benefit from the volume.

Introduction

Section 1: Context

Introduction

Becky Dowson

1. Music and dementia in the public consciousness and its relevance to
research

Becky Dowson

2. Community singing as a resource in dementia

Zara Thompson, Jeannette Tamplin

3 An overview of the impact of music-based interventions in congregate
settings for people living with dementia

Jelena Golubovic, Martina de Witte & Felicity Baker

4 What does music therapy offer to people living with dementia? A synthesis
of case studies

Becky Dowson

5 The importance of psychodynamic thinking in music therapy with people with
Dementia

Rachel Darnley Smith

6 Hearing loss, dementia and musical engagement: key considerations

Emma Broome, Emily Woodmansey & Lena Batra

Section 2: Methods

Introduction

Becky Dowson and Justine Schneider

7 The impossibility of equipoise in research on music and dementia

Justine Schneider

8 Neuropsychological and neuroimaging study of physical exercise with music
accompaniment for dementia prevention: the Mihama-Kiho project

Masayuki Satoh

9 Technological innovations in research and practice EEG Neurometrics, and
hyperscanning data in music therapy

Jorg Fachner & Clemens Maidhof

10 Reporting Guidelines for Music-Based Interventions Checklist: Explanation
and Elaboration Guide

Sheri Robb, K. Maya Story, Elizabeth Harman, Debra S. Burns, Joke Bradt,
Emmeline Edwards, Tasha Golden, Christian Gold, John. R. Iversen, Assal
Habibi, Julene K. Johnson, Miriam Lense, Susan M. Perkins

11 Designing Impactful Music-based Intervention Studies: The National
Institutes of Health Music Based Interventions (NIH MBI) Toolkit

Emmeline Edwards, Wen Chen, Coryse St. Hillaire-Clarke, Melinda Kelley,
Kaitlin Heimke Kirkpatrick, Caroline Sferrazza

Section 3: Impact

Introduction

Justine Schneider

12 Inspiring caregivers in India to embed music into the culture of
caregiving through Music Helps accessible training

Elsa Hariades, Alexia Quin, Nina Cherla, Pavithra Gangadharan

13 Training caregivers: music therapy skill sharing and building capacity

Orii McDermott

14 Challenges to the implementation of music research in practice

Ming Hung Hsu

15 Embedding musical care in everyday settings

Bev Foster

16 Delivering the power of music strategically: what policymakers and
planners need to know

Grace Meadows
Becky Dowson is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Cambridge Institute for Music Therapy Research, UK, and a music therapist at Chiltern Music Therapy.

Justine Schneider is Emerita Professor of Mental Health and Social Care at the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham, UK.