The Alliance for Recovery Research in Music Therapy

Tríona McCaffrey, Catherine E. Carr, Hans Petter Solli, Cornelia Bent, Darmuid Boyle, Oda Bjørke Dypvik, Kenneth Dybdahl, Tommy Hayes, Lauren M. Hickling, Jane Fernandez, Anne Malerbakken, Brendan Ruddy, Torgrim Vågan
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Abstract

The mental health recovery movement recognises the importance of expertise by experience held by service users alongside healthcare practitioners. Recovery has gained attention in music therapy but a situation prevails where practitioners and researchers set research agendas. A group of music therapists recognised the absence of service user voices in music therapy research, and in 2017 they established a network called the Alliance for Recovery Research in Music Therapy (ARRIMT). In 2020, they started to develop a multi-national platform to explore mental health recovery in relation to research. Service users and music therapists were invited from three countries including Ireland, Norway, and the United Kingdom (UK). Local meetings were held to introduce stakeholders from each country, followed by three online meetings. Music was central to each meeting and each built upon content from previous meetings. Our conversations opened up new possibilities for working together. Four priorities for practice and research were identified: Music as a connector; music between sessions; music technology; and, online music therapy. This report will share our process and what we learnt from working together. We contextualise our work within concepts of foregrounding and mattering and view this work as a crucial step towards meaningful co-production. We reflect upon the role of music in building group identity alongside the importance of careful curation. Finally, we present ideas for future music therapy and mental health research. Group DescriptionIn 2018 the Alliance for Recovery Research in Music Therapy (ARRIMT) was founded as an international group of music therapy service users, researchers and practitioners from Australia, Ireland, Norway, and the United Kingdom. Fundamental to this group is the concept of recovery where those who use and those who provide mental health services work together to share knowledge and experiences that can have a positive impact on mental health service delivery. Key to this is listening carefully to the voices of those who use music therapy so that their views and experiences influence how music therapy is offered in mental health services. The founders and coordinators of the group are Tríona McCaffrey, Hans Petter Paulen Solli, and Catherine E. Carr. Other members of the group are Cornelia Bent, Darmuid Boyle, Oda Bjørke Dypvik, Kenneth Dybdahl, Tommy Hayes, Lauren M. Hickling, Jane Fernandez, Anne Malerbakken, Brendan Ruddy, and Torgrim Vågan.
音乐治疗康复研究联盟
心理健康康复运动认识到,服务使用者和医疗从业人员的经验所带来的专业知识非常重要。康复在音乐治疗领域受到了关注,但从业人员和研究人员制定研究议程的情况普遍存在。一群音乐治疗师认识到音乐治疗研究中缺乏服务使用者的声音,并于2017年建立了一个名为 "音乐治疗康复研究联盟"(ARRIMT)的网络。2020 年,他们开始开发一个多国平台,探索与研究相关的心理健康康复问题。爱尔兰、挪威和英国等三个国家的服务用户和音乐治疗师应邀参加了会议。先在当地举行会议,介绍各国的利益相关者,然后举行三次在线会议。每次会议都以音乐为中心,每次会议都以之前会议的内容为基础。我们的对话为合作开辟了新的可能性。会议确定了实践和研究的四个重点:音乐作为连接器;疗程之间的音乐;音乐技术;以及在线音乐治疗。本报告将分享我们的工作过程以及我们从合作中学到的东西。我们将在 "前景化 "和 "重要性 "的概念下开展工作,并将这项工作视为迈向有意义的共同生产的关键一步。我们思考了音乐在建立群体认同感方面的作用,以及精心策划的重要性。最后,我们提出了未来音乐治疗和心理健康研究的想法。小组简介2018年,音乐治疗康复研究联盟(ARRIMT)成立,这是一个由来自澳大利亚、爱尔兰、挪威和英国的音乐治疗服务用户、研究人员和从业人员组成的国际小组。该团体的基本理念是 "康复",即心理健康服务的使用者和提供者共同努力,分享知识和经验,从而对心理健康服务的提供产生积极影响。其中的关键是认真倾听音乐治疗使用者的心声,让他们的观点和经验对心理健康服务中如何提供音乐治疗产生影响。该小组的创始人和协调人是特里奥娜-麦卡弗里、汉斯-彼得-保伦-索利和凯瑟琳-卡尔。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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