Music Therapy Assessment and
Treatment
Like all types of therapies, music therapy cannot begin until the
patient has been assessed by the therapist. Music therapy
assessment is similar in theory to the assessment done by any other
medical practitioner: the therapist evaluates the patient,
determines the patient's needs, addresses the patient's concerns
about the therapy process, and then creates a therapy program
tailored to that specific patient.
But music therapy assessment differs from medical assessment in
many ways as well. Whereas a medical doctor asks about the
patient's symptoms, decides on the cause and suggests a cure or
treatment, the music therapist cannot quickly determine the needs
of the patient based on a simple conversation. Many music
therapists need more than just a few minutes with a patient; they
require extended exposure to the patient in the form of
conversation, observation and sometimes even analysis of the
patient's environment before they can accurately determine what
type of treatment would work well for the specific
individual.
Once the music therapist has determined the needs of the
patient, they still have to create a treatment plan. Music
therapy assessment plays into this step as the therapist uses what
he or she observes and learns from the patient to adjust the
treatment plan accordingly. Music therapists often create
completely unique treatment plans for each patient because each
patient has specific, distinctive traits, symptoms, and needs that
are different from those of any other patient. Rarely will a
music therapy assessment lead a music therapist to exactly the same
treatment plan that he or she has used before.
This is not to say, however, that a music therapy assessment and
treatment plan will not lead the therapist to specific treatment
tools. In fact, there are methods of treatment in music
therapy – as there are in psychiatric therapy or any other therapy
– that are used to treat certain illnesses. For example, an
Autistic patient can expect his therapist to use treatment methods
that have been found to be successful in Autism patients.
However, there are many different methods for each illness and the
combinations of these treatment methods will differ with each
patient.
The multitude of treatment methods for each illness and ailment
is wonderful because it allows the music therapist to choose from a
wide range of possibilities to treat each individual.
However, the sheer number of potential treatments makes it even
more important that the music therapy assessment is performed by a
qualified music therapist who has extensive experience with the
patient's type of illness. The more experience a music
therapist has with Autism, for example, the better he or she can
treat the many different types of Autism that affect the
population.
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