Theme and variations: the introduction of commentaries to promote reflection.
Baker, Felicity
As we move towards celebrating the 20th anniversary of The
Australian Journal of Music Therapy in 2009, it is exciting to witness
the new developments occurring in music therapy research, the
contributions to the development of music therapy theory, and new and
emerging areas of clinical practice. To date, The Australian Journal of
Music Therapy has had a key role in the dissemination of information,
providing opportunity for music therapists to reflect upon how the
developments in the profession may better inform their own practice. To
further stimulate reflection, the current volume and forthcoming volumes
of the journal will include commentaries to accompany each of the
articles. Here, a researcher or clinician writes a short commentary on
the theme of the article as seen from his or her perspective--a
variation on the theme. The invited author comments on the article
considering issues such as its importance to the field, what it might
offer clinicians, how it contributes to the developments in that
specific field, and how it might fit or not fit with the invited
author's own research or perspectives on practice. I hope that the
commentaries provide readers with deeper insights to the themes being
addressed.
The four articles in this volume are diverse in their approaches
and themes. The first article by Dr. Helen Shoemark and Trish Dearn
present research which identifies issues needed to provide effective
clinical services with families of hospitalised infants within a
family-centred care approach. Dr. Deanna Hanson-Abromeit offers her
insights on the need for family-centred approaches. The article by
Melina Roberts and Dr. Katrina McFerran examines how music therapy has
been reported by the Australian media. Dr. Michael Silverman comments on
the article from the perspective of a researcher from the U.S. The third
article for this volume is by Melissa Smith. She reports on her study on
the use of music as a relaxation tool to reduce anxiety in a highly
stressful work environment, with comment by Professor Jaakko Erkkila.
The final article by Dr. Barbara Daveson, an experienced clinician and
researcher working in neurodisability in the United Kingdom. She
presents a meta-model of music therapy for the field of neuro-disability
across the lifespan. Her model promotes patient-led and patient-centred
care through a model that includes the appropriate choice of
restorative, compensatory, or psycho-social-emotional approaches. Dr.
Simon Gilbertson provides a commentary on the article.
Felicity Baker, Editor
Australian Journal of Music Therapy
University of Queensland