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Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities PDF

178 Pages·2007·5.05 MB·English
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Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities explores how music therapists work in partnership with people with learning disabilities to encourage independence and empowerment, and to address a wide variety of everyday issues and difficulties. Comprehensiveandwide-ranging,thisbookdescribes indetailtheroleand work of the music therapist with adults with learning disabilities. Many clinical examples are used, including casework with people with autism, Asperger’s syndrome, profound and multiple learning disabilities and a dualdiagnosis oflearning disabilityand mentalhealth problems.The book also explores issues of teamwork and collaborative working, considering how music therapists and their colleagues can best work together. The chapters are grouped into four sections: an introduction to current music therapy work and policy in the area, clinical work with individuals, clinical work with groups, and collaborative and teamwork. Guidelines for good practice are also provided. This is a thought-provoking and topical text for all those involved in work with adults with learning disabilities. It is essential reading for music therapists and fellow professionals, carers, policymakers and students. Tessa Watson is a music therapist and music therapy trainer. She is convenor of the music therapy training course at Roehampton University. Tessa’s current clinical work is with adults with learning disabilities for Ealing Primary Care Trust where she is Principal Arts Therapist. Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities Edited by Tessa Watson Firstpublished2007 byRoutledge 27ChurchRoad,Hove,EastSussexBN32FA SimultaneouslypublishedintheUSAandCanada byRoutledge 270MadisonAvenue,NewYork,NY10016 Routledgeisa nimprintoftheTaylor&FrancisGroup,aninformabusiness This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2007. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” Copyright(cid:216)2007Selectionandeditorialmatter,TessaWatson;individual chapters,thecontributors Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereprintedorreproducedor utilisedinanyformorbyanyelectronic,mechanical,orothermeans,now knownorhereafterinvented,includingphotocopyingandrecording,orin anyinformationstorageorretrievalsystem,withoutpermissioninwriting fromthepublishers. BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData AcataloguerecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary Libraryof CongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Musictherapywithadultswithlearningdifficulties/editedbyTessaWatson. p.cm. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN978-0-415-37908-3(hardback) – ISBN978-0-415-37909-0 (paperback)1.Musictherapy.2.Learningdisabilities–Treatment.3.Learning disabled–Rehabilitation.I.Watson,Tessa,1967– ML3920.M899652007 615.8'5154–dc22 2006102044 ISBN 0-203-94654-5 Master e-book ISBN ISBN:978-0-415-37908-3(hbk) ISBN:978-0-415-37909-0(pbk) Contents Contributors vii Foreword ix TONYWIGRAM Acknowledgements xii Introduction 1 TESSAWATSON 1 Valuing people: a new framework 5 TESSAWATSON 2 Music therapy with adults with learning disabilities: sharing stories 18 TESSAWATSON 3 Music therapy and autistic spectrum disorder 33 RHIANSAVILLE 4 Challenging behaviour: working with the blindingly obvious 47 CATHYWARNER 5 ‘What bit of my head is talking now?’: music therapy with people with learning disabilities and mental illness 58 ELEANORRICHARDS 6 Friendship and group work 71 CLAREL.FILLINGHAM 7 Community, culture and group work 85 TESSAWATSON vi Contents 8 Working with people with profound and multiple learning disabilities in music therapy 98 TESSAWATSON 9 Looking in from the outside: communicating effectively about music therapy work 112 BENSAUL 10 Multidisciplinary working and collaborative working in music therapy 121 KARENTWYFORDANDTESSAWATSON Appendix I: Guidelines for good practice for music therapists 133 Appendix II: Useful organizations and websites 137 References 140 Index 157 Contributors Tessa Watson is a music therapist and music therapy trainer. She is con- venor of the music therapy training course at Roehampton University. She has worked with a variety of client groups in mental health and learning disabilities, her current clinical work being with adults with learningdisabilitiesforEalingPrimaryCareTrust.Tessahasundertaken research in learning and teaching in the arts therapies, music therapy work with adults with learning disabilities, and women in secure psy- chiatric services, and regularly speaks about and publishes her work. Rhian Saville trained as a music therapist at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and is currently Head Music Therapist at Nottingham Healthcare NHS Trust. She has worked with children and adults in learning disability and mental health for 13 years, having a particular interest in people with autism. Cathy Warner PhD is senior lecturer in music therapy at the University of the West of England. She has 13 years of clinical experience in the fields of learning disability, mental health, bereavement and neurology, and has presented and published her work widely. She is particularly inter- ested in the perspective of the client within music therapy research. Eleanor Richards is Senior Lecturer in Music Therapy at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, and Senior Music Therapist at Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, where she works with adults with learning disabilities. Also a psychotherapist in private practice, she has a particular interest in the applications of attachment theory to therapeutic work with people with learning dis- abilities.Sheistheauthorofarangeofarticlesandpapers,andco-editor of Music Therapy and Group Work. Clare L. Fillingham is Lead Music Therapist for NHS Borders in Scotland, covering adult learning disability and mental health. She trained at Guildhall School of Music and completed a Masters research degree viii Contributors at University of Roehampton in 2003. She is currently completing a training in group analytic psychotherapy in Glasgow. Ben Saul works with adults with learning disabilities and challenging behaviour in Greenwich and is part of the transdisciplinary assessment team based at the Greenwich PCT Child Development Centre. He runs introductory courses on music therapy at City University, London. KarenTwyfordtrainedasamusictherapistattheUniversityofMelbourne, Australia. She has worked primarily in the area of special education in the UK and Australia. Her recent masters research investigated the use of collaborative multidisciplinary approaches amongst music therapists and other professionals in the United Kingdom. Foreword Tony Wigram Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities is a very welcome addition to the literature, especially because this population has attracted muchlessattentioninthepastcomparedwithotherpopulations.Theimpact ofalearningdisabilityismostkeenlyfeltwhenanincreasinglackofservices and support fails to recognise the uniqueness and potentials of this group within our society. In a world where labels carry more and more weight, paradoxically because of the label ‘learning disability’ we are all frequently guilty of underestimating and consequently reducing our expectations of people with mild, moderate, severe or profound learning disabilities. This fascinatingbookopensadoorintoacreativeworld,allowingustobeboth reassuredandchallenged,andtorealisewhatmusicusedtherapeuticallycan mean. Tessa Watson has brought together an experienced and highly skilled group of contributors to offer a detailed exploration and understanding of thevalueofmusictherapyinthismultifacetedarea.Thebookoffersinsights intotheroleofmusictherapyinaddressingtherealandeverydayissuesthat peoplewith learning disability face – the need to be recognised, listened to, understood and to open up their emotions through a medium that allows anger as much as happiness, sadness as well as joy, and bewilderment, fear and anxiety. Expressing difficult, sometimes painful emotions is not nega- tive; it is as necessary and healthy as positive emotional experiences. We frequentlydiscuss whether therapiesmeet health needs – wellhaving some- one listen and respond to your frustration and anger is also a health need, and as much a healthy process as physical treatments. Tessa Watson sets the scene by offering a practical and focused explana- tionoftherelevanceandscopeofmusictherapy,illustratingthisthroughthe process of three imagined people. This opening section provides such a useful understanding from referral to therapy, valuable for many differing groups – trainee music therapists, music therapy clinicians and educators fromwithintheprofession,anddisciplineswithinthemultidisciplinaryteam and managers of services from without. Tessa Watson also addresses the

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Music Therapy with Adults with Learning Disabilities explores how music therapists work in partnership with people with learning disabilities to encourage independence and empowerment and to address a wide variety of everyday issues and difficulties. Comprehensive and wide-ranging, this book describ
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