This study presents a tool (Music Therapy Rating Scale [MTRS]) to evaluate the progression of the relationship between the patient and the therapist during music therapy sessions. The rating scale was developed from an intersubjective framework and from an improvisational music therapy technique. It mainly consists of two behavioral classes: non-verbal communication (NVC) and sonorous-musical communication (SMC). Five levels for each class are given (from 0 to 4). Every 15 seconds, two sets of two music therapists coded the behaviors in seven sessions with different patients. The patients were seven children (four males; three females) aged 3-10 years (mean age = 6,28), diagnosed with Pervasive Developmental Disorder. The reliability indexes were computed and there was a substantial agreement in the assessments of the video raters (non-verbal relationship: ρ= 0.70; sonorous-musical relationship: ρ= 0.77). A digital output of the program to use the MTRS is presented and clinical implications are discussed.
Oasi, O., Raglio, A., Traficante, D., The evaluation of music music therapy process in the intersubjective perspective: The music therapy rating scale. A pilot study, <<PRAGMATIC AND OBSERVATIONAL RESEARCH>>, 2011; (2): 19-23. [doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/POR.S21891] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/31335]
The evaluation of music music therapy process in the intersubjective perspective: The music therapy rating scale. A pilot study
Oasi, Osmano;Raglio, Alfredo;Traficante, Daniela
2011
Abstract
This study presents a tool (Music Therapy Rating Scale [MTRS]) to evaluate the progression of the relationship between the patient and the therapist during music therapy sessions. The rating scale was developed from an intersubjective framework and from an improvisational music therapy technique. It mainly consists of two behavioral classes: non-verbal communication (NVC) and sonorous-musical communication (SMC). Five levels for each class are given (from 0 to 4). Every 15 seconds, two sets of two music therapists coded the behaviors in seven sessions with different patients. The patients were seven children (four males; three females) aged 3-10 years (mean age = 6,28), diagnosed with Pervasive Developmental Disorder. The reliability indexes were computed and there was a substantial agreement in the assessments of the video raters (non-verbal relationship: ρ= 0.70; sonorous-musical relationship: ρ= 0.77). A digital output of the program to use the MTRS is presented and clinical implications are discussed.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.