| Literature DB >> 32927626 |
SarahRose Black1,2, Lee Bartel3, Gary Rodin1,4.
Abstract
Since the 2015 Canadian legalization of medical assistance in dying (MAiD), many Canadian music therapists have become involved in the care of those requesting this procedure. This qualitative study, the first of its kind, examines the experience of music therapy within MAiD, exploring lived experience from three perspectives: the patient, their primary caregiver, and the music therapist/researcher. Overall thematic findings of a hermeneutic phenomenological analysis of ten MAiD cases demonstrate therapeutically beneficial outcomes in terms of quality of life, symptom management, and life review. Further research is merited to continue an exploration of the role of music therapy in the context of assisted dying.Entities:
Keywords: MAiD; assisted dying; end of life; music therapy; palliative care; phenomenology; qualitative
Year: 2020 PMID: 32927626 PMCID: PMC7551927 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare8030331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
An overview of patient participant demographics.
| # | Age | Diagnosis | Total # Sessions | Death Type | Death Location | Caregiver | Initial Clinical Goal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 57 | Metastatic ovarian cancer | 2 | MAiD | Home | Daughter | Reminiscence |
| 2 | 69 | Metastatic prostate cancer | 1 | MAiD | Cancer centre | Daughter | Comfort |
| 3 | 60 | Metastatic lung cancer | 5 | Natural | Cancer centre | N/A | Symptom management |
| 4 | 66 | Metastatic lung cancer | 1 | Natural | Cancer centre | Wife | Symptom management |
| 5 | 60 | Metastatic ovarian cancer | 3 | Natural | Hospice | Partner | Song-writing/Legacy |
| 6 | 67 | Met pancreatic cancer | 2 | MAiD | Hospice | Friend | Symptom management |
| 7 | 69 | Metastatic lung cancer | 3 | MAiD | General hospital | Daughter | Reminiscence |
| 8 | 53 | Metastatic anal cancer | 2 | MAiD | General hospital | N/A | Reminiscence |
| 9 | 86 | Metastatic lung cancer | 1 | MAiD | Hospice | Daughter | Reminiscence |
| 10 | 75 | Metastatic ovarian cancer | 1 | MAiD | Hospice | Husband | Music during MAiD |
Primary and secondary themes for patients.
| Themes | Primary | Secondary | Secondary | Secondary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THEME 1 | Life reflection (through the immediacy of musical interaction, music as narrator and as trigger) | In a time of moving towards death. | As witnessed by and engaged in with caregiver and/or therapist. | As triggered by musical choices. |
| THEME 2 | Control (over choices: musical, ritual, physical) | Death acceptance as a form of control. | Control of musical choices for the purpose of personal identity representation. | Control over choice of ritual and sequence of events. |
| THEME 3 | Communication and connectedness (with the self and others through music) | Music as an invitation to connected and communicate (between loved ones, between patients and loved ones, and between patients and clinicians). | Music as an act of exploring and understanding relationships. | Expression of emotion. |
| THEME 4 | Aesthetic pleasure (musical pleasure as a catalyst for therapeutic outcomes) | Music as a catalyst for memories and identity representation. | Music as a visceral, physical, and associative experience of pleasure. | Aesthetic properties of music as a source of symptom management support. |
Primary and secondary themes for caregivers.
| Themes | Primary | Secondary | Secondary |
|---|---|---|---|
| THEME 1 | Immediacy of emotion (access to emotion through music) | Music creates a holding space that allows for immediate access to emotion. | Music connects to emotional content with immediacy. |
| THEME 2 | Reflection (on personal narratives within the music) | Music invites a retrospective reflection into the caregiver’s experiences. | A contextual reflection period is created (within the music). |
| THEME 3 | Witnessing (emotional and narrative expression) | Witnessing patient’s experiences through the lens of music. | Interconnectedness between patient narratives and caregiver narratives. |
| THEME 4 | Unexpected opportunities (for life review through music) | Opportunity to engage in life review. | Opportunity to express unexplored/ |
Primary and secondary themes for the therapist/researcher.
| Themes | Primary | Secondary | Secondary |
|---|---|---|---|
| THEME 1 | Trust (in the midst of uncertainty) | Acknowledging and empathizing with the uncertainty of the patient; many unknowns in the MAiD process. | Trusting the patient as navigator, and therapist points out possible routes within the music. |
| THEME 2 | Witnessing (the unfolding of narratives through music) | Witnessing intimacy of relationships in the patients’ and caregivers’ lives. | Witnessing life and death narratives unfold through musical requests. |
| THEME 3 | Therapeutic Relationship Immediacy (formation and development through music) | Creating and maintaining the holding environment. | Relationship development between patient and therapist expedited in the music. |
| THEME 4 | Navigation (of MAiD processes, in tandem with patients, caregivers and the music) | Navigating timing of sessions within the context of MAiD. | Trusting the music as a co-therapist. |