“All it takes is one song to bring back 1,000 memories”: using music therapy in dementia care

unsplash-ipod-music

Earlier this month, it was reported that dementia had overtaken heart disease as the leading cause of death in England and Wales. And caring for those with dementia is becoming the major social care challenge of the 21st century – over 1 million people in the UK are expected to have dementia by 2021.

Despite significant research into the condition, there are no long-term cures. As a result, health and social care teams, and researchers into the health and well being of older people, have started to promote non-pharmacological ways of alleviating symptoms and reducing distress to the patient and their family.

Many of these techniques are widely accessible, require little to no formal care training and can take place either in the patient’s own home or in a care home setting. One of these techniques is the use of music as a form of therapy. While specially trained dementia and Alzheimer’s music therapists exist to give formal therapy, carers and family members can also use music to help improve the quality of life of a person suffering from dementia or Alzheimer’s.

Benefits of music therpay in dementia care

Research and experiences from practice regularly show similar outcomes when using music with dementia care patients. The benefits that are consistently highlighted include:

  • Music evokes emotion and this in turn can evoke memories which can help sufferers and family members to connect together.
  • Musical aptitude and appreciation are two of the last remaining abilities in dementia patients – it is one of the first cognitive skills we develop as new-born children and is one of the last things to leave us in degenerative cognitive diseases.
  • Music can bring an emotional and physical closeness the association that a patient makes with a song can encourage them to complete actions such as dancing or hugging which they associate with that piece of music. It can also enhance feelings of security and safety among vulnerable patients.
  • Singing can be used as a way to engage and to encourage people to express feelings, even if it does not include words or sentences. It can be a way to encourage participation and socialisation, as well as stimulating brain activity, dexterity and physical activity if actions are also introduced to go along with the words.
  • Music has been proven to stimulate the release of hormones which gives it the ability to shift mood and manage stress.

“Come fly with me … Let’s make a cup of tea”

One project from Purple Angel music has rewritten and altered the lyrics to some well-known songs which are loaded onto an iPod and can be placed in a person’s home to remind them to carry out day-to-day tasks such as eating and drinking, locking their front door, turning off their fire and showering.

The pre-loaded iPod, which comes in a number of musical genres, contains two 12-hour tracks  one which plays the lyrically-amended songs at two hour intervals throughout the day to act as a reminder service, and the other which is 12 hours of silence, designed to allow the patient to sleep without having to remember to turn off the iPod.

Examples of the altered tracks include:

  • L.O.V.E,  I’d love a cup of tea a song to encourage rehydration via a cup of tea
  • That’s Amore, That’s a bath day a song to encourage taking a shower or bath
  • Let There be Love, Let there be lunch a song to encourage eating
  • Can’t take my eyes off of you – a song to encourage night time requirements, like locking the door and turning off the fire.

A playlist for life

In August 2016, the Care Inspectorate backed a scheme called ‘playlist for life’ which encourages care homes to integrate music into their care for patients with dementia. Moving beyond just allocating a time to place headphones onto a patient and leaving them to listen alone (although at times this may be helpful too), the aim is for music to be a vehicle for connected care. It allows carers to use music as a tool to find out more about the person they are caring for and encourage them to engage through the music.

“Music can reveal previously hidden aspects of the patients to their carers; likes and dislikes, talents and memories – it all helps piece together the jigsaw of an identity obscured by illness.”

As the video above shows, using music can also be a way for family members to re-engage with the person suffering from dementia. It also  allows them to feel like they are directly involved in a positive element of care, as they are often invited to create the playlist, using songs that they know will evoke specific memories or emotions for the patient, and then listen along with them, interacting as they do so.

Similarly, Music for Life, a project run jointly by London’s Wigmore Hall and the charity Dementia UK brings specially trained musicians into care homes to work with patients, carers and family members in group and 1-2-1 sessions, creating and listening to music. Musicians, care home staff and managers meet after each session to reflect on what they have learned about the patients – knowledge that helps in future care and treatment.

Music as a communication tool

Formal research has supported the use of forms of music therapy, whether they be formally delivered by trained specialists or integrated into day to day caring by family or social carers. As mentioned above, research has demonstrated the positive effect it can have, both on the patient but also on their family.

Over 800,000 people currently live with the condition and roughly 25 million people  nearly half the UK population  are affected by it through knowing someone with the condition.

Music offers a way to care for people suffering from dementia in a sensitive, person-centred and cost effective manner. It can also be a vital tool to support families who can reconnect with their loved ones through a piece of music, even when other forms of communication have become difficult.


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Dementia’s impact on those who care

Old man

By Alan Gillies

Recent research has suggested that the rate of growth in the prevalence of dementia may be levelling out as the general health of the population increases. While such findings are encouraging, commentators have pointed out that increasing rates of obesity and diabetes, as well as the fact that people are living longer, means they have to be treated with caution.

Whether we face a continuing increase, a stabilisation or a decline in dementia, for those who are affected it will continue to have a devastating impact. And this includes not just the person with dementia, but also their loved ones and those who care for them.

A recent enquiry to our Ask a Researcher service asked for our help on this very question. As a social worker needing to understand the broader impacts of the disease on the family in order to be to provide appropriate help and support, the enquirer came to us looking for the available research evidence on the impacts of dementia on those caring for them. Our researcher was able to provide a comprehensive roundup of the current literature, highlighting the variety of issues facing carers of those with dementia.

Carers’ working lives

Not all the issues covered were ones that might be immediately obvious, like the practicalities of caring and the emotional impact of seeing a loved one affected. For example, one piece of research we were able to flag up examined the impact on carers’ working lives and workplace relationships.

Over half of respondents to a survey (53%) said that their work had been negatively affected due to their caring responsibilities. The survey highlighted the pressure on those in the prime of their working life, most often women, who are combining care for an older relative, often at a distance, with a range of other family responsibilities.

Minority ethnic carers

We also highlighted research on the way dementia can affect different sectors of the population. One recent study we identified, examined how the migration experiences and life histories of Sikhs living in Wolverhampton impacted on their experiences of caring for a family member with dementia and the barriers to accessing services.

It found that, rather than cultural differences, it was migrants’ experiences and perceptions of social exclusion, their perceived and actual social position as migrants, that affected the ways in which they accessed services.

Communicating with family members who have dementia

As well as drawing together a range of research on carers’ experiences and difficulties, we were able to include examples of initiatives, such as Talking Mats, which can help to improve the experience of caring for a loved one with dementia.

Talking Mats are a simple communication tool, developed at the University of Stirling, to help people with communication difficulties to express their views. It uses a simple system of picture symbols that allow people to indicate their feelings about various options relating to a topic.

Research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation looked at their use for people with dementia and their family carers. It found that, unexpectedly, although the people with dementia and the family carers both felt more involved in discussions using Talking Mats, the increased feeling of involvement was significantly higher for the carers. Carers repeatedly reported feeling ‘listened to’ by the person with dementia and felt that their loved one could actually ‘see’ their point of view. It found that many family carers said they often choose not to say something that is going to inflame a situation, so instead they say nothing at all. Whereas the Talking Mats tool allowed them time and space to have their say, and helped to organise and structure their conversation with the person with dementia for whom they cared.

Our response to the enquiry provided our member with a speedy and concise roundup of the currently available literature on the issues and difficulties facing those who provide vital care for people with dementia.


Our popular Ask a Researcher enquiry service is one aspect of the Idox Information Service, which we provide to members in organisations across the UK to keep them informed on the latest research and evidence on public and social policy issues. To find out more on how to become a member, get in touch.

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