05 August 2019 - 0 Comments
Music
Therapy New Zealand’s
annual awareness campaign will run from September
16 – 22 to proudly advocate for music therapy services and the
highly qualified NZ Registered Music Therapists (NZ RMTh), as well as
celebrating the spectacular triumphs that music therapy is having across
Aotearoa.
For 2019, Music Therapy Week will focus on Mental Health & Wellbeing
within the industry, drawing attention to the growing role of music therapy in
the mental health sector and highlighting the benefits that professional music
therapy can have on the wellbeing of our communities. The focus
this year on mental health is linked with our current government’s wellbeing
budget, with music therapy as one of the ways access and awareness of
support for mental health can develop. Music Therapy New Zealand recognise that
this emphasis is sadly timely within the context of the devastating
trauma inflicted directly within the Christchurch community and
the ripple effect this has had across Aotearoa.
As a practice, music therapy is the planned use of music to
assist the health and personal growth of people with identified
needs, ranging from emotional, intellectual, physical,
and social, with practitioners in New Zealand based in a range of medical,
rehabilitation, and education settings. Within the field of mental health,
therapists work with people experiencing psychosis, schizophrenia, dementia,
delirium, substance abuse, depression, anxiety and other
mood disorders. Due to the wide-ranging benefits of the practice, music
therapy is also increasingly being used to assist in general wellbeing,
mindfulness and stress relief, as well as providing support for those living
through the challenges of trauma, separation, grief, and end-of-life care.
Devin Brooks, a Registered Music Therapist in Christchurch, is looking forward
to the 2019 campaign and being able to share more widely what they do. “We are witnessing the ever-increasing
expansion of music therapy services throughout Aotearoa. Music Therapy Week
celebrates this incredible and significant work as well as advocating for the
professional use of music therapy by registered music therapist as an essential
role in supporting the health and wellbeing of the people we work with.”
Linda Webb MNZM, President of Music Therapy New Zealand (MThNZ) “It is a privilege to support the
valuable work registered music therapists carry out in Aotearoa. Music Therapy
Week provides an exciting opportunity for the public to gain an understanding
of music therapy practice across a range of contexts, and to appreciate its
potential to contribute to building resilient individuals and cohesive communities
throughout our country. Our aim is to progressively make a positive impact for
a wider range of New Zealanders into the future.”
A growing field around the world, there are 15,000 board-certified music
therapists practicing globally, with approximately 70 people holding current
practicing certificates in New Zealand who are highly trained to ensure best
practice and safety for their clients. Despite the numbers and proven benefits
of music therapy, a lack of awareness and understanding hinders the impact that
this innovative treatment style can have for a diverse range of people and
conditions. Music Therapy Week aims to create transparency by opening this
specialised practice up to the public, with therapists and clients in the
main centres offering performances, workshops, and insights into how music
therapy works in practice.
Beginning the week on Monday 16 September, Raukatauri Music Therapy Centre in
Auckland will host a launch event to screen two short films about music therapy
in Aotearoa. The films focus on different elements on how music therapy is
benefitting people in New Zealand, the first based in Christchurch working with
children who have experienced trauma and the second created about Auckland’s
CeleBRation Choir, a singing group for those who have experienced a
neurological condition. A complete schedule of public events as part of
Music Therapy Week 2019 is to come.
Follow the Music Therapy
New Zealand website and Facebook page for updates:
musictherapy.org.nz
facebook.com/MusicTherapyNewZealand/
Music Therapy Week is proudly supported by the Hugo Charitable Trust
hugocharitabletrust.nz/
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