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Various Writers • January 28, 2019

Musician in healthcare appreciates partnership

My personal journey into this world of music and care began as an interest in the power of music to connect people, to provide a platform for communication without the need for the usual awkward conversational rules of engagement – at which we Brits are frighteningly proficient!

Beginning as an occasional volunteer musician at a children’s hospital, I was fortunate enough to gain a place on a European programme led by the incredible French organisation Musique & Santé, to train as a Musician in Healthcare and later as a Trainer for this practice. This experience fed my passion for the use of music to connect people, whatever their circumstance, and led to my ‘mission’ of providing cultural encounters in clinical environments.

As Chief Executive of OPUS Music Community Interest Company , I’m now surrounded by a team of brilliant musicians/trainers who share in this skill and passion. Together we work in healthcare environments with people of all ages, from babies in neonatal intensive care, to teenagers in mental health settings, to people living with dementia and those nearing the end of life.

Over the past eight years, OPUS has trained many people in the use of music in healthcare. Our courses and apprenticeships for musicians have led to the formation of many new organisations and programmes of practice across the UK. Building this network through conferences and symposia has resulted in the formation of the National Alliance of Musicians in Healthcare which fed into a recent governmental inquiry into the impact of Arts and Health. This inquiry now inextricably connects the UK governmental departments of Health and Culture, imploring them to work together with the shared understanding that the Arts (including music) keeps us well, aids our recovery, and supports longer lives better lived.

So when I first met with Bev Foster back in late 2017, I was excited to hear about the wonderful work of the Room 217 Foundation. For many years, care staff have been inspired by the impact of our practice, and asked for support in continuing purposeful music-making with their patients outside of our visits. We were always happy to provide ideas, to help them explore their own musicality, and to find their own way to use music within their scopes of practice. But now, suddenly here was something carefully researched and designed, something with structure, something to provide a standardised progressive training for carers, something with a name – Music Care!

Over the past year, my team and I have been incredibly fortunate to shadow Sarah Pearson and Chelsea Mackinnon during their delivery of Music Care training in the UK, and to take on this mantle for ourselves. Our first course, in partnership with Nottingham University, took place in November 2018 and was wonderful to deliver and to watch our participants grow in confidence and excitement at the prospect of taking new music care initiatives back to their own settings. This is just the beginning of a process of rolling Music Care out across the UK, a process which OPUS is excited to lead in partnership with Room 217 Foundation.

And now, at the beginning of 2019, I am preparing for a trip to Toronto and to the home of Room 217 in Port Perry. I’m excited to be meeting with other Music Care trainers, to sharing ideas together for the continued development of this curriculum and training, and to connecting through music-making with this incredible group of people. Exciting times ahead!

Nick Cutts is Chief Executive, OPUS Music Community Interest Company

By Shelley Neal March 8, 2024
I initially trained with MUSIC CARE to work with Seniors in Long Term Care who were experiencing dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease. This is the path I travelled with my mom. My training with Music Care and Room 217 supported capacity building in selecting music that was played on my harp or chosen recorded music. The music centered on the care of the individual and their specific needs. My job was to determine the individual’s specific and select music to address these needs. The music selected helped to build community, support sleep, talk about life experiences, create a background landscape of sound, support connection to decrease isolation and loneliness, as well as coming alongside people dying. My training with Music Care helped me understand how to support people “where they were” physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Through using beat, tempo, melody, and timbre, I could cater the music and desired support required for individuals or small groups. My profession is teaching. I am a special education teacher and use music in my primary teaching as a method for learning, practicing language skills, transmitting information about science studies or math equations, as well as having fun and creating our own songs. My teacher toolkit married exceptionally well with the knowledge and skills provided by the Music Care Certification training. Recently, my work with students has involved individual programming for the medically fragile children and the palliative children. I use music (repeating the chorus several times) to engage and connect with the kiddos. We use music to "talk" about feelings (our communication is through eye gaze, eye blinks, and squeezing hands), and content material. I use music to enjoy our relationship of being together. At times, due to medication for seizures, my little ones can be very sleepy. I increase the tempo, engaging in tapping the beat on her hands and using silly action songs. The giggles and wiggles make it magical. I also use music to tell stories (my students have CVI, cortical vision impairment, so visual perception is difficult). This helps the child to engage in the story arch and adventures. Music is my conduit for reaching out and being with the students. Recently, I had the sacred journey of visiting one of my children in ICU at Sick Kids. I was invited to come to say "goodbye". A dear friend who was an ICU nurse in a different department told me (AKA, insisted) that I bring my harp with me. I wasn't sure if this would be appropriate for the family. However, with the permission of the mom, I bravely packed my harp up and took it to the Unit. It was a beautiful evening of talking with their mom and dad about how special their child was in my life. I played the kiddo's favorite songs and then ended with "The More We Get Together". The little one opened their eyes and stared at me. We hugged, and I left. They passed the next morning. I consider this time to be a sacred gift. Music Care Certification has given me the confidence and toolset to work alongside people and to journey together. It is a time a beautiful, difficult, or sacred time that I have been honoured to participate in.  Thank You
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