Patients’ voices from music therapy at a South African psychiatric hospital

South African Journal of Psychiatry

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Patients’ voices from music therapy at a South African psychiatric hospital
 
Creator Lotter, Carol van Staden, Werdie
 
Subject Psychiatry; Music Therapy; Public health music therapy; verbal expression; musical participation; patient voices; adult mental health
Description Background: In the Life Esidimeni tragedy, crucial voices of mental healthcare users and practitioners were silenced, captured in the Ombud’s report as a ‘failure to listen’. Working against this kind of failure, various therapeutic interventions listen deliberately and uncover the voice of the patient, that is, what matters from his or her subjective perspective in his or her particular circumstances. Amongst these interventions, music therapy provides for this sensitive listening by expanding the scope and means of expression from the verbal to the musical.Aim: This article reports on a qualitative exploration of patients’ lived experiences both during and after their course of individual music therapy, expressed both verbally and in the language of active music-making.Setting: A tertiary public psychiatric hospital in South Africa.Methods: Audio-video recordings of 131 music therapy sessions and 15 post-therapy interviews were analysed thematically. From three sets of themes accounting for patients’ verbal contents, musical participation and verbal post-therapy reflections, 11 salient voices were identified.Results: The 11 voices that emerged were (1) the voice of struggle, (2) the voice of disturbance, (3) the voice that feels, (4) the voice of isolation, (5) the powerless voice, (6) the voice that desires, (7) the voice of flow and connection, (8) the reflecting voice, (9) the symbolic voice, (10) the resilient voice and (11) the voice of liberation.Conclusion: Although mental health practitioners may recognise these voices from their clinical experience, space and opportunity for hearing the voice of each patient should be generated deliberately.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor N/A
Date 2022-07-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Qualitative research
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/sajpsychiatry.v28i0.1884
 
Source South African Journal of Psychiatry; Vol 28 (2022); 8 pages 2078-6786 1608-9685
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://sajp.org.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/1884/2687 https://sajp.org.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/1884/2688 https://sajp.org.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/1884/2689 https://sajp.org.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/1884/2690
 
Coverage South Africa Feb 2014-May 2017 Age range 18-57 years; 8 male, 12 female; Mental health users
Rights Copyright (c) 2022 Carol Lotter, Werdie van Staden https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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