
A musician who plays for patients at Stepping Hill Hospital’s intensive treatment unit (ICU) has spoken at an international conference on the benefits of musical therapy.
Amy Bowles is trained to provide therapeutic music, and is the first musician of her kind to have a long term residency at an NHS ICU. As part of a series of lectures, she addressed the Neurosciences in Intensive Care International Symposium held at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, sharing evidence of the positive neurological effects which music can have for patients.
Amy is a classically trained guitarist and singer who visits Stepping Hill Hospital’s ICU on a weekly basis, playing calming and melodious music for our patients. Her visits are part of the ‘Restore and Recover’ project funded by Arts Council England to use music to help soothe patients, staff and visitors.
Her presentation drew on both her own personal experience and the weight of academic evidence that music has a statistically provable benefit on patient experience and outcomes.
Heavy medication, lack of sleep and a relentless environment can lead many people to develop symptoms of PTSD and delirium, and music has been shown to help reduce these symptoms. Music has also demonstrated benefits in reducing the length of hospital stays, helping with pain management, and fostering positive mental health outcomes. The music also helps busy and stressed staff to cope within a challenging working environment. Feedback from patients, families and carers on the music has been overwhelmingly positive.
Amy has previously also played at the neonatal intensive care unit at Stepping Hill Hospital in previous years, with the support of the Music in Hospitals charity, and has also played at other hospitals, mental health trusts and care homes across the North West. Amy Bowles said:
“Playing on the ICU can be a really emotional experience, for patients, carers, staff, and can remind everyone of the importance of connection and community within a clinical setting. I’d really like to thank Stockport NHS Foundation Trust and the whole critical care team for welcoming me here, and giving me the opportunity to take part in what is a really groundbreaking project for the NHS. Therapeutic music really works, and I hope many more people are going to benefit from it in the future.”
Joe O’Brien, Matron for Critical Care, Stockport NHS Foundation Trust said:
“We’re so pleased that Amy is able to visit our patients each week to play her beautiful music, we always look forward to when the day comes. Even for the most seriously ill, music can have really positive effects, and patients and families have made it clear that they really appreciate it. We’re also delighted she has been able to share her experiences in Paris so that more people can find out about the advantages therapeutic music can bring. ”