Music therapy, listening to music reduces anxiety in patients receiving mechanical ventilation


Listen music improves mood, relaxes and soothes the mind and is good for everyone, some more than others. In patients receiving mechanical ventilation For example, there have been many benefits from listening to music; benefits resulted in a reduction of complications.

To say this is a recent study by a group of researchers Cochrane coordinated by Dr. Joke Bradt. Research has shown that the music can relax patients and has a potential to reduce the risk of other disorders related to difficulty breathing, the anxiety primarily.

The mechanical ventilation is in fact often causes great discomfort and creates tension in patients. The feeling of breathlessness The frequent intake, inability to speak, the uncertainty regarding their status health, Isolation from others, and fear are all feelings that contribute to a growing increase of been anxious. Unfortunately, drugs administered to reduce the anxiety can lead to an increased frequency of hospitalization and increased medical expenses.

“With all these factors that make the experience highly stressful mechanical ventilation, it is exciting that music can provide a way to reduce anxiety in these patients without costly side effects,” said Bradt.

The researchers examined data from eight studies involving 213 patients in total. Patients with various ailments, including lung diseases, heart disease and traumatic injury, were assisted by a music therapist which provided music live in a time combined with respiratory rate of the patient. On average, listening to music has reduced the most anxiety compared to standard care. It also slowed the heartbeat and completed on breath.

“These results seem promising, but we need further studies to strengthen the evidence, basing the search on a greater number of responses from live music provided by music therapists specialize,” says Bradt. “Since listening to music is easy to prescribe a treatment, could be used by therapists as a form of stress management for critically ill patients.”


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