Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression

Depression is a very common mood disorder, resulting in a loss of social function, reduced quality of life and increased mortality. Music interventions have been shown to be a potential alternative for depression therapy but the number of up-to-date research literature is quite limited. We present a...

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Main Authors: Daniel Leubner, Thilo Hinterberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01109/full
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spelling doaj-f35c0fa6e4a04faa8cab19df716beafd2020-11-24T23:49:55ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782017-07-01810.3389/fpsyg.2017.01109236680Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating DepressionDaniel LeubnerThilo HinterbergerDepression is a very common mood disorder, resulting in a loss of social function, reduced quality of life and increased mortality. Music interventions have been shown to be a potential alternative for depression therapy but the number of up-to-date research literature is quite limited. We present a review of original research trials which utilize music or music therapy as intervention to treat participants with depressive symptoms. Our goal was to differentiate the impact of certain therapeutic uses of music used in the various experiments. Randomized controlled study designs were preferred but also longitudinal studies were chosen to be included. 28 studies with a total number of 1,810 participants met our inclusion criteria and were finally selected. We distinguished between passive listening to music (record from a CD or live music) (79%), and active singing, playing, or improvising with instruments (46%). Within certain boundaries of variance an analysis of similar studies was attempted. Critical parameters were for example length of trial, number of sessions, participants' age, kind of music, active or passive participation and single- or group setting. In 26 studies, a statistically significant reduction in depression levels was found over time in the experimental (music intervention) group compared to a control (n = 25) or comparison group (n = 2). In particular, elderly participants showed impressive improvements when they listened to music or participated in music therapy projects. Researchers used group settings more often than individual sessions and our results indicated a slightly better outcome for those cases. Additional questionnaires about participants confidence, self-esteem or motivation, confirmed further improvements after music treatment. Consequently, the present review offers an extensive set of comparable data, observations about the range of treatment options these papers addressed, and thus might represent a valuable aid for future projects for the use of music-based interventions to improve symptoms of depression.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01109/fulldepressionmusic therapymeta-analysisneuropsychologypsychosomatic medicineneurophysiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Leubner
Thilo Hinterberger
spellingShingle Daniel Leubner
Thilo Hinterberger
Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
Frontiers in Psychology
depression
music therapy
meta-analysis
neuropsychology
psychosomatic medicine
neurophysiology
author_facet Daniel Leubner
Thilo Hinterberger
author_sort Daniel Leubner
title Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
title_short Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
title_full Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
title_fullStr Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
title_full_unstemmed Reviewing the Effectiveness of Music Interventions in Treating Depression
title_sort reviewing the effectiveness of music interventions in treating depression
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Depression is a very common mood disorder, resulting in a loss of social function, reduced quality of life and increased mortality. Music interventions have been shown to be a potential alternative for depression therapy but the number of up-to-date research literature is quite limited. We present a review of original research trials which utilize music or music therapy as intervention to treat participants with depressive symptoms. Our goal was to differentiate the impact of certain therapeutic uses of music used in the various experiments. Randomized controlled study designs were preferred but also longitudinal studies were chosen to be included. 28 studies with a total number of 1,810 participants met our inclusion criteria and were finally selected. We distinguished between passive listening to music (record from a CD or live music) (79%), and active singing, playing, or improvising with instruments (46%). Within certain boundaries of variance an analysis of similar studies was attempted. Critical parameters were for example length of trial, number of sessions, participants' age, kind of music, active or passive participation and single- or group setting. In 26 studies, a statistically significant reduction in depression levels was found over time in the experimental (music intervention) group compared to a control (n = 25) or comparison group (n = 2). In particular, elderly participants showed impressive improvements when they listened to music or participated in music therapy projects. Researchers used group settings more often than individual sessions and our results indicated a slightly better outcome for those cases. Additional questionnaires about participants confidence, self-esteem or motivation, confirmed further improvements after music treatment. Consequently, the present review offers an extensive set of comparable data, observations about the range of treatment options these papers addressed, and thus might represent a valuable aid for future projects for the use of music-based interventions to improve symptoms of depression.
topic depression
music therapy
meta-analysis
neuropsychology
psychosomatic medicine
neurophysiology
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01109/full
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