Clinical Decision-making in Music Therapy: Case Studies
- Author: Heiderscheit, Annie & Jackson, Nancy
- ISBN: 9781945411991
- E-ISBN: 9781945411984
There are marvelous case studies in the music therapy literature that paint a beautiful, complex picture of the client’s therapeutic process in music therapy. Clinical Decision-making in Music Therapy, however, offers cases that are not just about the client and their therapeutic process, but specifically about the music therapist’s clinical choices and why they made them in relation to the needs of the client. This book contains 53 cases from music therapy clinicians from around the world including work with diverse clientele from across the lifespan in a wide variety of settings.
Each case includes a discussion of the music therapist’s clinical choices, their reflection on the case, and a description of their context in relation to their clinical work. Cases are arranged according to the method-variation used, with additional sections that focus on a transition from one method-variation to another.
Students will find these cases useful for exploring and understanding clinical decision-making for working with clientele with unique strengths and needs. Professionals may find the cases useful for expanding their ways of thinking and acting within their clinical work, and deepening their awareness of how they respond to the emergent needs of clients.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
PART I: COMPOSITIONAL METHOD-VARIATION CASES
Chapter 2: Songwriting with a preteen in neurological rehabilitation, by Annie Heiderscheit
Chapter 3: Songwriting with a child with Autism Syndrome, by Allison M. Fuller
Chapter 4: Song transformation with adults with acquired traumatic brain injuries, by Hermi Viljoen
Chapter 5: Composing a rap with an adolescent with an emotional impairment, by Angel Leung
Chapter 6: Songwriting with a group of Syrian refugee children in a multi-disciplinary creative arts therapy program in Turkey, by Danny D. Kora
Chapter 7: Songwriting with transgender youth struggling with chemical dependency, by Emma Moonier
Chapter 8: Song transformation with adolescents in Eating Disorder treatment, by Hailey Ward
PART II: CASES THAT TRANSITION FROM A COMPOSITIONAL METHOD-VARIATION
Chapter 9: Songwriting transitioning to referential instrumental improvisation with an adult in outpatient oncology, by Stephanie Morris
Chapter 10: Song collage transitioning to song discussion with dually diagnosed men, by Nancy Jackson
Chapter 11: Transitioning between song collage and instrumental improvisation with an adolescent in a special education setting, by Davina Vencatasamy
Chapter 12: Music composition transitioning to music-assisted relaxation and imagery with an adult with Sickle Cell Disease and chronic pain, by Samuel N. Rodgers-Melnick
Chapter 13: Songwriting transitioning to song discussion with a transgender adolescent in mental health day treatment, by Kendri Ebert
Chapter 14: Playlist creation transitioning to improvisation and songwriting with a man with mood disturbance, by Nsamu Moonga
PART III: RE-CREATIVE METHOD-VARIATION CASES
Chapter 15: Singing with a group of adults diagnosed with Schizophrenia, by Özgür Salur
Chapter 16: Re-creative music for developing an inclusive band in an adult disability day service facility, by Juyoung Lee
Chapter 17: Group re-creative singing with adults in a forensic psychiatric hospital, by Kimberly Lloyd
Chapter 18: Re-creative music therapy utilizing assistive technology with an adult with Cerebral Palsy, by Jason Noone
Chapter 19: Re-creative music therapy with a patient in hospice, by Larisa McHugh
Chapter 20: Re-creative singing and instrumental playing with a client recovering from a stroke, by Sisi Lin
Chapter 21: Re-creative therapeutic lessons with an adolescent in mental health treatment, by Nancy Jackson
PART IV: CASES THAT TRANSITION FROM A RE-CREATIVE METHOD-VARIATION
Chapter 22: Song re-creation transitioning to song discussion with a community women’s group, by Joy Willenbrink-Conte
Chapter 23: Re-creative transitioning to improvisational music-making with a mother and her autistic child, by Eugenia Hernandez-Ruiz
Chapter 24: Vocal re-creation transitioning to receptive music experiences with an adult with primary progressive aphasia via telehealth, by Becky Wellman
Chapter 25: Transitioning between vocal re-creation and improvisation with a woman diagnosed with complex PTSD, by Aksana Kavaliova-Moussi
Chapter 26: Vocal re-creation transitioning to receptive experiences to expand speech prosody, by Brea Murakami
Chapter 27: Technology-based re-creation transitioning to improvisation with an adolescent girl with Rett Syndrome, by Marijke Groothuis
Chapter 28: Transitioning between re-creative and receptive music therapy methods to support an adult undergoing stem cell transplant, by Lucy Forrest
PART V: RECEPTIVE METHOD-VARIATIONS
Chapter 29: Song reminiscence with a hospice patient and her daughter, by Emily Borkholder
Chapter 30: Music and imagery for emotion regulation to address work-related stress and unresolved trauma, by Hyun Ju Chong
Chapter 31: Receptive music therapy during procedural support for an infant and parents in the NICU, by Karinné Andonian
Chapter 32: Culturally-specific receptive music for a Chinese patient and her adult son in palliative care, by Jingwen Zhang
Chapter 33: Music listening with a hospitalized patient suffering from migraines, by Kimberly Spitz Donley
Chapter 34: Receptive lullaby and song-of-kin with a hospitalized infant and their parents, by Elizabeth Klinger
PART VI: CASES THAT TRANSITION FROM A RECEPTIVE METHOD-VARIATION
Chapter 35: Music and projective drawing transitioning to referential improvisation with an adult chronic mental health group, by Nancy Jackson
Chapter 36: Receptive music therapy transitioning to improvisation with a child with Autism, by Baishali Banerjee Mukherjee
Chapter 37: Receptive music transitioning to improvisation with a healthcare worker receiving a lung transplant post-COVID-19, by Laura McFee
Chapter 38: Music-centered relaxation transitioning to songwriting in a music therapy staff support group for survivor advocates, by Nadine Cadesky
Chapter 39: Group guided imagery and singing transitioning into songwriting in a short-term psychiatric hospital, by Karen de Kock
Chapter 40: Song communication transitioning to song transformation with a mother in the NICU, by Elisabeth Bombell
Chapter 41: Receptive music and movement transitioning to improvisation for affect integration with a child with severe trauma, by Unni Tanum Johns
PART VII: IMPROVISATIONAL METHOD-VARIATION CASES
Chapter 42: Group improvisation with adults in Eating Disorder treatment, by Annie Heiderscheit
Chapter 43: Improvisational music therapy with an adolescent in a therapeutic day school, by Lindsay Rossmiller
Chapter 44: Improvisation with a child to address medical trauma, by Taylor Baloga Loufek
Chapter 45: Improvised songs with a teenage girl with complex trauma, by Hsin I Cindy Lai
Chapter 46: Improvisation with an adolescent refugee receiving treatment for severe burns, by Mireya P. González
Chapter 47: Vocal improvisation with a young girl with multiple and severe disabilities, by Elide Scarlata
Chapter 48: Improvisation with parents and their baby in the NICU, by Elisabeth Bombell
PART VIII: CASES THAT TRANSITION FROM AN IMPROVISATIONAL METHOD-VARIATION
Chapter 49: Improvisation transitioning to receptive music relaxation in a family setting, by Kathryn Eberle Cotter
Chapter 50: Improvisation transitioning to songwriting with a man with PTSD, by Bill Ahessy
Chapter 51: Non-referential improvisation transitioning to re-creative songwriting with a teenage student, by Regina R. Cesarz
Chapter 52: Improvisation transitioning to receptive music experiences with individuals with trauma and anxiety, by Molly Griest
Chapter 53: Non-referential improvisation transitioning to songwriting with a child in foster care, by Annie Heiderscheit
Chapter 54: Improvisation transitioning to songwriting in couples music psychotherapy, by Emma Moonier