Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

HEALING NOTES

Dance and music therapy are finally here, aiding recovery and easing stress, in labour wards, OPDs, ICUs and recovery rooms

- Rhythma Kaul & Tanya Verma rhythma.kaul@hindustant­imes.com

Every time her newborn becomes cranky, Hayat Fatima, 26, plays the ‘Selfie le le’ song from Salman Khanstarre­r Bajrangi Bhaijaan. Instantly, the one-month-old calms down. “I was seven months pregnant when I watched this movie. He started kicking hard the moment this song started. It felt like he was dancing inside me. This was the only song he reacted to that way,” says the Delhi schoolteac­her. “After he was born, I noticed that he still enjoyed the song. We now play it to pacify him and it really works.”

From labour wards to OPDs and postoperat­ive recovery rooms, music — and dance — are making their presence felt in India, in an extension of a trend that began in the US and Europe about two decades ago.

“The human body, from the time of conception, incorporat­es music into its functions,” says Dr A Sampath Kumar, former chief of the cardiothor­acic centre at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS). “Music is especially useful in nursery and paediatric wards, labour rooms, waiting halls of outpatient department­s and operation theatres. The effect of music on healing is quite apparent in post-operative intensive care units [ICUs] too, where it has been shown to reduce anxiety and pain and have a soothing, tranquilli­sing effect.”

The term ‘dance therapy’ was coined in the US and the American Dance Therapy Associatio­n defines this discipline as “the psycho-therapeuti­c use of movement as a process that furthers emotional, cognitive and physical integratio­n in individual­s”. One could draw a parallel between physiother­apy and dance therapy, although doctors don’t recommend dancing until about eight weeks after surgery.

“Dance therapy — as long as it is undertaken with medical guidance — is a fun-filled way to engage and express yourself while also improving your physical and mental condition,” says Mumbai-based movement therapist Dilshad Patel. “It quickens the healing process and helps divert a patient’s mind and improve their mental state.”

Dr Chitra Kataria, principal of the Indian Spinal Injuries Centre’s Institute of Rehabilita­tion Sciences, adds that dance and music therapy allay anxiety and fear. “We believe it also helps patients adjust to their environmen­t and they then tend to recover faster,” she adds.

This institute now conducts hourlong dance and music classes every Wednesday, a practice it began a year ago. At these sessions, patients can pick between Bollywood music, regional songs and western pop or classical tunes.

Rakesh Chikhara, 39, who underwent major spine surgery on August 28 and is still in hospital, vouches for the benefits of the dance class.

“In just five sessions, I have seen my coordinati­on improve,” she says. “I also feel very positive after every session.”

Mumbaiite Ananya Walia, 26, would agree. She turned to dance a year ago, when neither medication nor convention­al physiother­apy was helping her recover completely from a slipped disc.

“On a particular­ly hectic day during my post-graduate accountanc­y studies two years ago, I tripped on the stairs of my college and hurt my back,” she says.

Her condition was not that bad, but it was affecting her life badly, adds her physiother­apist, Dr Shivangi Borkar. “The pain persisted despite medication and twice-weekly massages and she had trouble walking. After a year of this, I suggested she join movement and dance therapy, strictly warning her not to do any jumping, forward-bending or lifting.”

Walia accordingl­y signed up for sessions of slow, rhythmic dance, and, as her muscles strengthen­ed, the pain abated.

“After eight months, I took a break and decided to resume the sessions if the intense pain returned, but it never did,” she says. “Where I once couldn’t walk without pain, I am now commuting and travelling without thinking twice.”

FACING THE MUSIC

One area where music has been shown to have profound beneficial effects is in the neurology and neurosurge­ry ICUs. Patients who are paralysed, comatose or semi-comatose respond to sound, particular­ly familiar tunes or voices, with enhanced will and recovery, to the extent that doctors now permit and even prescribe music therapy for such patients.

Dance therapy has been utilised since its inception in the 1940s to promote healing in people diagnosed with physical disabiliti­es and mental illness. Dance therapists work with people who are dealing with a variety of medical conditions including disorders such as traumatic brain injuries, parkinson’s, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injuries, cancer, fibromyalg­ia, and chronic pain. It focuses on movement behaviour, and body movement, as the core component of dance, simultaneo­usly provides the means of assessment and the mode of interventi­on for dance/movement therapy.

Doctors say it also helps calm them — and their patients — during surgery.

“I always listen to music inside the cath lab,” says Dr Vishal Rastogi, head of interventi­onal cardiology at Fortis Escorts Heart Institute, Delhi, who performs 10 to 12 angioplast­ies a day. “Each procedure takes about an hour. The music helps keep us focused. It is gentle music; not that head-banging variety, so it also benefits the patients undergoing the procedure. These are conscious patients who can see and hear what’s happening around them, so it helps them relax.”

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: RAVI JADHAV ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: RAVI JADHAV
 ?? SAUMYA KHANDELWAL/HT ?? Hayat Fatima, 26, often plays the song ‘Selfie le le’ to calm her cranky newborn. “The human body, from the time of conception, incorporat­es music into its functions,” says cardiac surgeon Dr A Sampath Kumar.
SAUMYA KHANDELWAL/HT Hayat Fatima, 26, often plays the song ‘Selfie le le’ to calm her cranky newborn. “The human body, from the time of conception, incorporat­es music into its functions,” says cardiac surgeon Dr A Sampath Kumar.

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