According to the American Music Therapy Association (AMTA), talk of music as a therapy slowly grew in the early 1900s, though the first reference to music therapy was in an article in 1789. Throughout the 1800s, researchers began slowly studying and writing about the relationship between music and emotion. One researcher of music therapy suggests that the World Wars in the 20th century were crucial in music therapy's growing popularity, stating, "Wars are considered to have a big influence to both bringing the mental illness to the fore, and in establishing strategies for treating the problem. For instance...World War I led to the acceptance of psychiatry as an integral part of medical treatment; World War II lead to the...use of music in hospitals." The use of music in World War II hospitals triggered the establishment of music therapy as a profession, when musicians would visit veterans who had suffered physical and emotional trauma. Music was used to distract veterans from their pain, but the psychological and physiological responses from the patients were overwhelming, leading hospital administrators to ask for more and more musicians. From music therapy's success in the 1940s emerged college training programs in various states across the U.S. to train musicians to use music systemically in therapeutic situations.
World War II strongly heightened music therapy's popularity
when Veterans recovering from trauma were positively
influenced by music in their hospitals.
The National Association for Music Therapy (NAMT), founded in 1950, created standards for university-level training requirements for hopeful practitioners of music therapy. Music therapist helped the vision and hearing impaired, veterans, and those suffering from psychological disorders. Research uncovered that music could help people recover parts of their brain that they did not think they'd be able to recover after a traumatic event. Because of the success of music therapy , since its founding, the NAMT saw its growth "from a few dozen practitioners to thousands." In 1998, the NAMT joined with the American Association for Music therapy to create the AMTA, which now has 5,000 members.
Since the 1940s, music therapy as a profession has grown to span the country, and is now practiced internationally. Through the years it has grown from a helper in recovery to a true therapy. Researchers have studied music's effect on the brain, and different associations and psychologists worldwide have concluded music's real ability to change peoples' lives; today, music therapy has grown from helping to not only manage the pain of a traumatic event or an illness, but helping the speech, memory, motor, and occupational parts of the human brain.
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