How iPods are used to help dementia patients at long-term care homes - Action News
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How iPods are used to help dementia patients at long-term care homes

Newfoundland and Labrador's largest health authority is expanding a program that uses music as a form of therapy for residents of long-term care facilities.

Eastern Health expands Music & Memory therapy program for long-term care residents

Music and memory

9 years ago
Duration 1:19
A new program launched today, using iPods to play music for seniors living with dementia. The hope is that the music will help jog forgotten memories of years gone by.

Newfoundland and Labrador's largest health authority is expanding a program that gives personalized music devices topeople with dementia, allowing themplay music tailored to their tastesand designed to elevate their quality of life.

"We put the headphones on and after a while they become accustomed to it and it's familiar, and they're transported to a different place in their lives a place where that music is important,"saidSheila Williams, a musical therapist at Saint Luke's home in St. John's, one of three long-term care sites where Eastern Health's Music & Memory pilot program has been operating for the last 18months.

Williamstold CBC News she's seen the program workwonders for residentsof long-term care facilities.

Sheila Williams, the musical therapist at Saint Luke's Homes in St. John's. (CBC)

She said staff interview the residents and their families "to see what music reaches them," and then prepare customized playlistsfor individual iPods.

The pilot project has also been running atSt. Patrick's Mercy Home in St. John's and Harbour Lodge Nursing Home in Carbonear.

The program matches those living in long-term care facilities with their own personalized iPods that have music on them tailored to the resident's own tasteswith a specific focus on music that makes them feel calm and relaxed.

Eastern Health announced the expansion of the program at an event in St. John'searlier this week.

The program is based on the idea that people's brains are hard-wired to connect music with long-term memory.

Research shows that for those suffering from Alzheimer's, dementia or other cognitive challenges, familiar music can trigger well-preserved memories enabling the listener to focus on the present moment and to regain a connection to others.

The hope is that music therapy will result in mood improvement and enhanced verbal communication and physical activity.

Families and long-term care staff help to decide which music will be best for each individual resident's iPod.

Long-term care employees have reported variousexamples of how the program has been working since the pilot was launched. They include noticeableimprovements toverbal skills, less aggressive behaviour from residents andeven cases where residents have been seen singing and dancing while listening to their new iPods.

The next site identified for expansion of the Music & Memory program is the St. John's Long-Term Care Facility, anticipated in the spring of 2016.

Other sites in various stages of implementation are Chancellor Park Nursing Home in St. John's, and Dr. A. O'Mahony Memorial Manor in Clarenville.

A similar program was first launched in the United States in 2006, which led to health authorities throughout North Americaincluding Eastern Healthdeveloping their own.

The Music & Memory approachwas the subject of the award-winning 2014 documentary film Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory.