Tag Archives | parent infant bonding

Music Therapy in the NICU: An RN’s Perspective

I recently asked Shelley Frazier, RN, BSN, IBCLC, what she thought about music therapy. She is the Lactation Consultant, Discharge Planner, and Education Coordinator for the Newborn ICU at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital in Florida. Shelley also helps facilitate the National Institute for Infant & Child Medical Music Therapy at Florida State University. The research in NICU music therapy program at Shelley’s hospital has been established since the early 1990s.

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What do you notice that music therapy does for the infants, and what criteria do you use for referrals?

The babies love the music therapy!  We do several different kinds here. They enjoy when we take them out of the isolette and gently touch them and sing softly to them. So often touch in the ICU is harsh and disturbing to the baby. Rolling them over, sticking them for labs, putting nasogastric tubes down their noses. The touch from music therapy is kind, soft and gentle. The babies love it. We also do the music therapy where they suck on a pacifier to turn on the music, and I have found that this is helpful for getting the ready to suck/swallow/and breathe babies ready to eat. They will suck to hear the music and music gives them pleasure and the longer they suck the better it is. It helps to increase their endurance for sucking and in the long run helps them to be ready to feed.

The criteria is not really in hard print. A baby needs to be intermediate care status. In an isolette or open crib. Not having a lot of apneic episodes. Stable on an oxygen source or on room air. Not an irritable BPD baby.  Someone that can benefit from suck endurance. Around 31 weeks gestation or more.

Does music therapy overstimulate infants?

We watch the babies closely for when they are physiologically ready for music therapy. Everything kind of has to fall into place for the individual baby to receive Music Therapy….and stay in place. In other words, a baby can qualify one week, start to feel bad the next week, and we will need to postpone the therapy until later. We really don’t start music therapy until the kids are ready to start getting a bit of stimulation. Music therapy is also a way to teach parents about the right kinds of stimulation for their baby (e.g. gentle though, quiet voices).

How does music therapy change the general NICU environment?

I feel that music therapy is very helpful to the parents as a calming tool, something they can do/ be trained to do with their baby. It is something that they can continue to do at home after the baby is discharged. It can lend some “normalcy” to an otherwise very high tech environment. As for the babies, they love it. They respond well to it, and it can also be a continuation of activities at home. It can lower their heart rate and assist them with becoming accustomed to touch and sound in our world.

How does music therapy change parents’ attitudes, visitations, and/or behaviors in the NICU?

Some parents are very receptive to outsiders working with their babies, and some are not. I do find that a very stubborn difficult parent to an NICU nurse/RT/doctor, can be sweet and kind to the music therapist. The parents can have some control with music therapy. I have found that if you prearrange a time with parents, they love to visit during music time.  A large percentage of our parents are from out of town and have a lower socioeconomic status and are unable to visit frequently, but if they live in town and have a car they will visit during music time.

For more information about NICU music therapy, please see the following posts:

9 Research-based Effects of Music in the NICU
45 Hospitals around the World that Provide NICU Music Therapy
Does Music Therapy in the NICU Overstimulate Infants?
NICU Music Therapy Overview (video)
Book Review: Bella’s Blessings

Let me know you thoughts, comments, and/or questions about music therapy and babies.

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Book Review ~ Bella’s Blessings: A Humble Story of Providence

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Book Review
Bella’s Blessings: a Humble Story of Providence by Timothy Ringgold

I’ve never had a baby, not to mention gone through the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) experience as a parent, so I can’t say “Oh sure, I understand.” There is no way that I can fully comprehend what it’s like to find myself forced to ponder the mortality of my own offspring. I can try to imagine, but I really don’t understand on the deepest level. However, in the memoir Bella’s Blessings: A Humble Story of Providence, Timothy Ringgold gives no choice but to understand, to feel what he feels, to see what he sees, to hear what he hears. The author makes a close and memorable connection with the audience immediately at the start of his riveting story. Timothy recounts his family’s journey with no reservations, no hesitations, heightened intensity, and no preparation. After all, there is no preparation for parents who have a newborn swiped out of their arms and rushed into intensive care, requiring  special medical attention at birth. The condition is Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) and was completely unforeseen and undetected in obstetrical tests and ultrasounds.

The author has a wonderful wife and two beautiful girls. He owns and operates Sonic Divinity, a music therapy service agency in Orange, CA. In addition, he is a board certified music therapist with specialized training in the NICU setting. In other words, he is qualified and trained to help infants heal faster when hospitalized. Unfortunate fate or divine blessing? Timothy states his case clearly in favor of divine blessing.

The journey of Bella’s Blessings consists of 2 major sections: the first 48 hours and the blog. As soon as the social worker at Children’s Hospital of Orange County introduced the author and his wife to CarePages.com, the author regularly posted blog updates as information came in, as challenges were met, and as inspirations dawned. Bella’s first 3 months are documented. In his journey, the author describes the many trials, tribulations, and solutions that come with a newborn emergency: doing research on the disease, getting in touch with the best professionals, coping with financial issues, settling into a new lifestyle, and bonding with Bella through music therapy techniques. He describes how he and his family come together and get to know Bella using music therapy before she is ready to be held, when she experiences distress, and in those especially difficult moments when he and his wife bathe, feed, and change Bella’s dressings. The most touching and grounding aspects of getting to know Bella is keeping the faith, focusing prayer, and taking note of Every. Little. Piece. Of. Providence.

The author vividly describes the honest and raw human experience as a father, husband, and advocate for his family. His story evokes a broad spectrum of emotions from anger, sadness, denial, shock, and confusion, to confidence, courage, joy, and resolve. Purely authentic and real, Timothy takes it day by day and shares how he relates and does not relate to medical staff, meaningful moments of supporting his wife, strengthening the marriage, “The Good,” “The Bad,” and the big picture. In reading the author’s take on providence (which is expressed in various formats in every blog post), I’m reminded of Byron Katie’s book Loving What Is. As Katie suggests “It’s not the problem that causes our suffering; it’s our thinking about the problem.” Full of wisdom, as well as practical solutions to real problems, Timothy expresses his own personal perspective on “thinking about the problem.”

If you are having trouble finding [the Silver Lining] in any given situation, ask for clues. God will reveal them. Just be willing to deal with the fact that [the Silver Lining] may not be what you originally were looking for.

Because of Bella’s inspiration, the author also sends out occasional requests to readers, offering clarity to those friends and family members who want to support the family. The question from loved ones is often, and sometimes desperately “What can I do?” A perfect example for the power of focused prayer, the Ringgold family’s requests in the blogs are always specific and focused. Any family can learn a great deal from the Ringgolds.

Bella’s Blessings reminds the public of the power of prayer, how equally real the unseen is in our physical plane, how spirituality and faith integrate and manifest into physical outcomes, and the importance of consciously acknowledging signs of providence in every day life.

All along we thought that Bella needed the healing. In reading Bella’s Blessings, she actually heals us, the readers.

Read the author’s blog and see more pictures here http://careforanabella.blogspot.com/

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