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Adult “Preemies” in the NICU?

January 18th, 2009 · Music with Newborns and Preemies

Adult ‘preemies’ get NICU treatment

Published: Friday, Jan. 9, 2009 1:06 a.m. MST
The room is dark and mostly silent, except for the sound of a heartbeat that seems to reverberate everywhere. “Baby” lies on the floor, eyes closed and peaceful. Then the doors fling open and noisy people rush in, grasping at Baby, repositioning her, using a tongue depressor the size of a paint stirrer and taping an oversized straw in her mouth. At 28 weeks’ gestation, she’s about to be admitted to intensive care, with all the testing that entails.
 

Strangers fuss with her diaper and someone positions an ice-cold stethoscope. Before they’re done, she will have had cold liquid on her skin, been talked to VERY loudly and had lights shined in her pried-open eyes. The tape that secures the tube in her mouth will be pulled off — and probably re-applied and pulled off again.

It’s enough to make a grown Baby want to cry, as the adult volunteers playing Baby learned in a special training Thursday called “Preemie for a Day” at University Hospital.

Imagine how all the poking and fussing feels to actual preemies in an intensive care unit, said Kay Johnson and Michelle Waddell, child development experts from Children’s Medical Ventures, which presents the training worldwide. The session was sponsored by the hospital and March of Dimes, which has a family support program in the U. Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, said spokesman Stephen McDonald.

At times the volunteer babies had trouble stifling laughter, but the message was serious: Little things like shielding a real preemie’s eyes from the light or warming gel before applying it make a huge difference. And stress is harmful not only to healing, but to development.

Later, Johnson said, some of the volunteers will say they were cold. That’s easily fixed. Some will say it was too loud. That’s something staff can change, too.

This type of training is not just about comfort. Proper handling aids a premature baby’s brain development — and certain things can disrupt it. It’s possible, for instance, to bypass complete auditory development as you push visual stimulation. Poor positioning can set up later problems with receptiveness to touch and body alignment and more.

The training also helps staff deal with and guide the stressed-out families of preemies. Take touch: preemies have different tolerance for it. Education and collaboration helps families figure out what pleases and soothes the baby. Petting, for instance, may irritate the baby but is instinctual for some parents.

Johnson emphasized the need for NICUs to transition babies so when they go home they’re not facing abrupt and disruptive changes, especially during sleep. Premature babies, she said, make the “top five” on the shaken babies list, adding more urgency to helping them be good sleepers and less fussy at home.

Respect was another theme. “How many of us know who this baby will become,” Johnson said, adding that if staffers always respect the baby, the parents and their own co-workers, “you will never make a mistake.”

“This reinforces how powerful touch is,” said occupational therapist Sarah Meyer after the training. “What we do really does have impact on these babies long-term and on brain development. We can influence development.”

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The Music Cure

January 17th, 2009 · Music Healing

Take Note…The Music Cure

Everybody know music makes them feel better, right? Is there anyone out there who doesn’t know that? Lest there be any questions, there are more and more people publishing studies every day saying that music can heal, music can cure, music can just make you feel better and forget your troubles for a little while, right?
Well now, a new article by Barbara Reuer has come out and was published recently in “Bottom Line Secret.” I thought you might enjoy seeing a little of it:
Music has been used for healing for thousands of years — and numerous recent studies confirm its healing powers. It can reduce pain and anxiety and improve blood pressure and breathing. It even can help infants in neonatal intensive care units gain weight faster. Here’s how you can use music to improve your mental and physical health…
PAIN RELIEF
Music therapy can relieve pain and decrease the need for painkilling drugs. It seems to be most effective for short-term pain, such as during dental procedures, after surgery, etc. A study published in European Journal of Anesthesiology reported that postsurgical patients who listened to music required less morphine.
It also helps some types of chronic pain. A study published in Journal of Advanced Nursing found that listening to music for an hour a day reduced chronic pain by up to 21% and depression by up to 25%.
How it helps: People in pain can’t focus on opposing sensations simultaneously. Listening to music helps block the perception of pain signals and reduces anxiety, which can heighten pain.
Recommended: When you’re in pain, practice deep breathing while listening to a favorite piece of relaxing music. Ask your doctor to play calming background music during painful procedures. If a music therapist is available during the procedure, he/she might play music while guiding you through a visualization exercise (such as imagining a peaceful scene) or encouraging you to breathe more deeply.
HEART HELP
Music therapy is used in some coronary care units to lower blood pressure and heart rate. Music also lowers levels of stress chemicals (such as cortisol) that increase the risk for a heart attack.
Recommended: At least once a day, listen to music that you find relaxing. Pay attention to the melodies, rhythms and words… think about what the music means to you… and notice the physical signs of relaxation.
There’s more but this gives you a good idea of the work that has been done in this field to document how music affects the mind and the body. Enjoy!!

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Music for Colonoscopy?

January 15th, 2009 · Music and Surgery

Is there a colonoscopy in your future?

Considering that colonoscopies are the best way to catch colon cancer at its earliest stage, people still do whatever they can to put off this routine screening. While it is true that no one looks forward to a colonoscopy, perhaps a little music can help make the experience more pleasant. That’s the indication of a new study, presented at the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy’s national meeting, which shows that patients who listened to music during their routine colonoscopy required less sedation for the procedure. “Offering music makes sense,” said Dr. Benjamin Krevsky, lead author of the study and professor of medicine at Temple University School of Medicine. “It has no downside, it may prove beneficial and patients appear to be satisfied with the procedure.” For the study, Krevsky and colleagues invited 73 men and women to bring music from home or choose from a selection of CDs with the understanding they may be played during their colonoscopy. Ear buds were taped to the participants’ ears before each procedure and the volume was adjusted so the music was only audible to the patient. Then, after the initial dose of a sedative commonly used during a colonoscopy, it was randomly determined if the music would be played during the procedure itself. Further doses of the sedative were given if necessary. After the procedure, each patient was asked about their discomfort and pain levels during the procedure and if they had any anxiety. From their data, the researchers determined that those who listened to music during the colonoscopy needed approximately one less dose of the sedative mediation, while still reporting about the same levels of comfort as those who did not listen to music. If music does indeed reduce the amount of sedation a patient needs for a colonoscopy, it could lead to reduced healthcare costs and greater satisfaction with the overall procedure. “Over all, colonoscopies are very, very safe.” Krevsky said. “And while the risks of sedatives are relatively small, in general, less medication is better.” The type of music the patients selected didn’t seem to matter. Krevsky even suggests toting along your mp3 player to your next colonoscopy. Your favorite tunes may make the procedure a little easier to bear.

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Music as a pathway to spirituality

January 14th, 2009 · music and spirituality

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZQ-jjhlyFM

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Why use music during surgery?

January 13th, 2009 · Dangers of anesthesia, Music and Surgery, Rhythmic Entrainment, Vibrational and Sound Healing

Why use music during surgery?

The concept of using music for pain relief is ancient. People have literally been doing this for thousands of years. The concept of using music during surgery is a little bit newer. For 30 years or more, surgeons have been taking their own music into surgery, but for some reason, no one thought that patients should have their own music. The belief was that the patient was “asleep” and wouldn’t even hear it. What they did not understand was that the human body responds to music, even when asleep…not only the body, but also the mind and the spirit. Through the process of “entrainment” the body responds to rhythmic music by synchronizing the heartbeat and breathing to that tempo of speed of the music. The mind also responds to slow, steady, soothing music by relaxing the body. The effect: when the body is relaxed, it requires less anesthesia in order to stay “asleep.” Less anesthesia means safer surgery, fewer side-effects and complications and a faster recovery! It’s so simple. If you want to try this, click on the link HERE. Best wishes!

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Vibrational Healing: One way that music heals

January 9th, 2009 · Toning and Chanting

Vibrational Healing: It works!

Vibrational healing is a process whereby vibrations are introduced or transferred into a human being’s physical and energetic bodies, so that the vibrations which have become unbalanced in the human physical or auric body are adjusted. This is based on the idea that illness or disease in the human and auric body is characterized by blockages and imbalances. These blockages and imbalances causes a cell, organ, system, or energetic body to slow it’s vibration. Slow vibrations result in disease (dis-ease) or illness. The process of vibrational healing adjusts these unbalanced vibrations.
To be healthy, an individual needs to have a high rate of vibration in their physical and auric bodies. This vibration is nourished in many ways including what we think, feel, believe, see, hear, smell, touch, eat, drink, breathe, and are exposed to. As an individual becomes ill their rate of vibration lowers. As the rate of vibration lowers the individual becomes more susceptible to other negative energies and invaders and the cycle of poor health becomes self-perpetuating.
Many internal developments affect the rate of vibration of a human body. Each cell, organ and system has its own vibration. Each emotion that one feels, creates a separate vibration in the human body; each thought we have creates a unique vibration; each color has its own vibration; every sound carries its own vibration; each smell has its own vibration.
Many external factors affect the vibration of the human body. We are bombarded with electromagnetic frequencies that can influence the vibrational rate of our physical and etheric bodies. Each household appliance, television set, cell phone, microwave oven is sending out these vibrations. Mother Earth is surrounded by various electromagnetic grids that can also affect our vibrations. Underground water can also disrupt the healthy vibration of the human system. And finally, there are many entities which can rest in our auras, homes and offices which can seriously affect our rates of vibration. The following provides a more detailed description of what can affect our vibrations and a brief look at different types of vibrational healing.
The relationship between the body, emotions, mind and spirit is not always with us. The additional mystery of the relationship of Mother Earth and the broader Universe is also never ending. It’s quite fascinating to realize that the human body is able to automatically balance the complex world of internal and external vibrations and find its own equilibrium. Illness occurs when our vibrations become unbalanced and this equilibrium is disturbed.
Different Types of Vibrational Healing
Vibrational healing has been used for thousands of years in ancient civilizations. Egypt is said to have used sound and color for healing and that many of their healing centers had special rooms devoted only to healing with color and sound. The Chinese have used acupuncture, another form of vibrational healing, for centuries.
In the United States today, acupuncture is becoming a much more common method for dealing with illness. Reiki, another form of vibrational healing is being practiced by many energy practitioners in North America and Europe today. Homeopathy is another form of vibrational healing. This uses the principle of “like cures like” and introduces minute amounts of certain substances at varying energy levels to activate the healing vital force of the human body. A simple form of hands on healing is another form of vibrational healing. An individual places their hands so that their vibration which is stronger, is transferred into an individual who has been weakened or fatigued. There are many other examples of vibrational healing which work effectively.

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Apollo, Greek God of Music and Medicine

January 8th, 2009 · Announcements, Music Healing

You’ve probably heard of Apollo, God of Music and Medicine.  When I was planning my website over fifteen years ago, I thought it would be wonderful to have the theme of Apollo running through the site.  Although I later strayed from this theme, I still think it’s so important for people to know about Apollo and how revered he was.

My point is to show that Music and Medicine have been linked for thousands of years.  It is a documented fact that for thousands of years, most physicians were also musicians and they understood how to use and prescribe music in a way that was helpful to ill people.  For example, a physicians in the time of Socrates might have suggested or prescribed to someone suffering from depression that they have someone play the lyre in the Phrygian mode for 30 minutes before bed.  Or someone with a migraine or nausea might be prescribed a lute playing in the Dorian mode for 20-30 minutes in the evening before bed.  The fact is that we don’t really know exactly how music was prescribed, but there are numerous ancient treatises that mention music as a treatment for illnesses.

There seems to be a resurgence of people naming their sons Apollo, and it’s definitely a great name and image!  Apollo was not only the Greek god of music and medicine, but also of many other things and his name lives on today.  In my case, it’s just another major historical indicator that music and medicine have always gone together  in a serious and meaningful way.  Next time you’re not feeling well, put on some of your favorite soothing music; try using instrumental music primarily,  and just notice how it makes you feel!

Please click on the link below to read all about Apollo.  Enjoy!

http://healingmusicenterprises.com/Apollo.html

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Have you seen “Wicked”? This song is beautiful!

January 8th, 2009 · Music Healing

Another example of music that goes straight to the heart  Click on this link to hear one of the most beautiful songs I’ve heard lately!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwpKB-sj7GI

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