Benefits and Limitations of Music Therapy With Psychiatric Patients in The Penitentiary System
Benefits and Limitations of Music Therapy With Psychiatric Patients in The Penitentiary System
Benefits and Limitations of Music Therapy With Psychiatric Patients in The Penitentiary System
Romanowski, Bob
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Romanowski, B. (2007) Benefits and limitations of music therapy with psychiatric patients in the penitentiary
system. Music Therapy Today Vol.VIII (3) December. available at http://musictherapyworld.net
I see the context of my work as the place where society has to cope with
the consequences of what went wrong in other areas. Prison is not the
best possible answer to the problem of criminal deviation and dissocial-
ity… but it is the answer our society has provided until today, and the
reality is indeed depressing.
the social context that the public is unwilling to invest more than abso-
lutely necessary into the penitentiary system – the widespread opinion is
that prison time is intended as a punishment. Prisoners are conceded only
the absolute minimum of what is seen as necessary.
I mention this to underline that life in prison is not easy, not for prisoners
who are ill, nor for nursing staff and other employees.
The mission of the medical team, i.e. the treatment objective, is to stabi-
lize patients and make them “well” so that they can be returned to, and
endure the hardships of, the normal penitentiary system. Curing in this
case means to help patients to survive their sentence with as little (bodily
and mental) damage as possible.
The patients
I shall describe some of the problems patients bring into the hospital and
into therapy. Such problems must be addressed in successful resocializa-
tion. I understand therapy as an integral part of resocialization.
Many patients come from the fringes of society, from the bottom. They
have little resources to improve their social status.
Addiction and drug problems are frequent among prisoners, with sub-
stance abuse, addictions in general as well as politoxicomania (use of
multiple substances).
Why are prisoners referred to our clinic? Some people become physically
ill in the normal penitentiary system, others draw attention with behav-
iours like withdrawal, self-neglect, suicide attempts or self-injury (graz-
ing, cutting, swallowing objects, or other forms of autoaggression), or
wildly aggressive behaviour towards others, kicking up a row or destroy-
ing cell equipment etc. Such patients can no longer be kept in the normal
system (employees are responsible for their welfare) because they endan-
ger themselves or others or give the impression of being ill for other rea-
sons (for example manic or compulsory behaviour).
Weekly team meetings are attended by physicians, nursing staff and ther-
apists; this is when patients are referred to individual therapies. As a rule
the physician has discussed this with patients before, e.g. on his visits. I
then contact the patients in question and arrange details of their participa-
tion in therapy.
CONTEXT OF Why does the treatment team expect interventions to have beneficial
TREATMENT
effects on patients? A simple explanation: normal/healthy forms of
behaviour are exercised in therapy.
Art therapy addresses the need for aesthetic performance and processing
of mental processes in the form of created pictures. The objective is to
externalize inner processes in a non-verbal form, as a picture or sculp-
ture, so that it may be discussed and made aware or handled in some way.
MUSIC THERAPY WORK I shall describe music therapy in more detail. This intervention was intro-
duced at the psychiatric department ten years ago. I offer music therapy
sessions on the basis of a 6-hour contract per week and am expected to
cover as many patients as possible within this time; accordingly I offer
group therapy: two groups with 4 to 6 patients each, for a therapy session
of 45 to 65 minutes. In addition there are team discussions, preparatory
work etc.
social relations and fulfils its function in these contexts – for example in
church, at the opera, in military service, in dancing, at open air festivals
or rave parties, at the Love Parade; ultimate objectives are harmony,
accord, catharsis (emotional release).
Talking about music I refer to more than the general, everyday concept of
music. Sometimes I ask my patients: what is music? Then I hear general
descriptions like: what comes out of the radio, the CD player. Instru-
ments, rhythm, notes, hip-hop, techno …
Fun and emotions emerge from the experience of contact with others, of
being moved together with them and being absorbed by a mutual contin-
uum, being surrounded by music, moving and communicating with oth-
ers. When we listen to a musical recording we feel touched in a
secondary way as well, although this is not the same intensity you feel
when you attend a musical event. Music in the process of generation has
the quality to address the now, the situation and atmosphere of the
moment. A feedback is created between all involved actively and pas-
sively.
This is the offer I have for my patients. I suggest: come to me, take up
contact, come into this prelinguistic space, let us do so together. And later
on I ask questions: what is it we just experienced? The premise is that it is
important for us to express in words what we experience, to find terms to
describe, locate, evaluate and change or adapt our behaviour. This in par-
ticular is a therapeutic approach.
If you read this article and are not present at my lecture, please try to
imagine the following situation. We can try something together and you
will get an idea of what self-experience is, what music therapy is, what
you experience in music therapy. It is an intervention with the opportu-
nity of self-experience. The idea is to experience the self in a specific sit-
uation with another individual or a group and to discuss this experience.
The context is protected and supportive, which is necessary for processes
of self-experience. Therapy follows the principle of guidance, is super-
vised by a qualified therapist, and in this function I ensure discipline and
intervene if something unexpected happens. Such situations are particu-
larly productive because they serve to exemplify something: how joint
interaction is successful or fails.
In the lecture version of this paper this is when I invite the audience to
sing together with me. The motif has an Indian touch and goes “na-na-na-
na, na-na-na-na, hey-hey-hey – good-bye (from a popular title by the pop
group Steam in the 1960s: “Kiss him good-bye”).
Then I tell my audience: You now had the opportunity of a short self-
experience when we tried to sing this melody together. In therapy this is
the moment for a feedback with the question: What did you experience?
Part of the audience probably enjoyed singing together. Perhaps you had
associations and memories. Others may have reacted offended and were
not in the mood, perhaps thought “oh, this is childish and not appropriate
in this context”.
Others did not wish to joint in at all – being ashamed of their own voice,
“what will others think of me?”. These are some possible responses. In
therapy this is the starting point for therapeutic work; the idea is to find
out what these different responses mean. How and what did the individ-
ual experience?
Let me address the function joint singing fulfils in human society. Sing-
ing is a pleasurable activity and promotes social and mental hygiene. It
improves interaction within a group. It produces feelings of togetherness
and being integrated in joint activity (sense of community). It means tun-
ing in to a joint rhythm or a melody followed by all involved. Just imag-
ine this situation!
If work with patients is very hard, if they are not in the mood and not pre-
pared to get involved, if they resist, then sometimes I find something new
and spontaneous to trigger the process – and if I succeed this is particu-
larly satisfying for all participants and the therapist, too.
MUSIC THERAPY Music therapy activities I employ at the psychiatric ward (there are other
ACTIVITIES
music therapy methods as well):
Group sessions have three phases. First a general welcome and introduc-
tion of newcomers. “The motto of this session is we do what is possi-
ble!”. The main part of the session is played out as spontaneously as
possible, depending on the situation. In the final phase participants have
the opportunity to evaluate what happened, and I announce what is
planned for the next session.
Which are the objectives of music therapy? The Dutch music therapy
researcher Henk Smeijsters explored “Therapy effects of music”
(Smeijsters 1997) and evaluated a number of studies on depression and
schizophrenia. From his findings I shall quote two very general “rules of
Rules of thumb:
Outlook
In future our society will have to find new ways how to guide individuals
who have fallen into deliquency or are under the stigma of psychiatry to a
socially integrated and accepted existence. Music therapy and other cre-
ative therapies may help because they promote an understanding of pro-
ductive togetherness and a deliberate employment of personal resources
in situations of conflict.
Outlook 475