Surgical Serenity Headphones and other medical procedures

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Music during surgery and other medical procedures is a very good idea.  Procedures such as colonoscopies, plastic surgery, dental surgery, chemotherapy, labor and delivery, setting broken bones, even giving injectionsm can be used by providing the patient with lightweight headphones that are programmed with soothing music.

Everyone knows (I believe) that music distracts you from pain, anxiety, fear and stressful thoughts.  Our thoughts are powerful and can actually increase the amount of fear and anxiety that the patient is experiencing.  When you listen to soothing music through headphones, not only are you distracted from the anxiety-provoking medical procedure, but the headphones (rather than earbuds) help to block out the sounds and converations involved with the procedure.

My surgical headphones were patented back in 2008 and are now in use all over the U.S. and in three foreign countries!  I hope that you will give them a try if you or a friend or family member has a medical procedure or surgery on the horizon.  There have been hundreds of medical research studies about the benefits of music before, during and after a medical procedure or surgery and they all say it’s a great idea!

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to reduce the amount of anesthesia and analgesia you’ll need and thereby recover faster and more safely!  Please contact me if you have any questions at all!

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Pacemaker surgery…can music help?

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Updates on Music with Surgery

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Good Monday morning to you! As you may know, helping people to use music with their surgery is one of the main things that I do. There is so much research out there on the multiple and varied benefits of music THROUGH HEADPHONES during surgery that it’s no surprise that more and more hospitals are offering music to incoming surgery patients during the pre-surgery phase. I’m working hard to create a powerful and easy-to-use system that patients can take into surgery or having waiting for them in the waiting area. I’m working on an eBook right now that will provide a step-by-step process for creating your own surgery playlist and talking with your physician/surgeon about using music before, during and after the procedure.
As I travel around the country I try to talk with as many interested physicians as possible about these ideas. On a recent trip to Sarasota, Florida, I had the pleasure of meeting with Dr. Marlene Buckler, an ER doc who is very excited about my music and surgery ideas and has given me many insights and suggestions already. I’d like to refer my readers to her website http://www.stayoutofmyer.com/ and suggest that you sign up for her free “Tip of the Week.” I’ve worked with hundreds of people now, helping them choose the perfect music for their procedure. I hope you’ll consider it and tell your friends to visit my website for more info! Have a great week!
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The Hospital of the Future

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Music is being utilized today in hospitals and clinics around the world. Music has an ability to minimize pain, leading to the combination of music and anesthesia in operations where routine medical sedatives are not effective. Music medicine is beginning to be considered a complimentary therapy.
“People undergoing surgery require less anesthesia, awaken from anesthesia more quickly and with less side effects, and heal more rapidly when healing music is played before, during and after the surgical procedure. Patients recovering from heart attacks and strokes respond much more quickly to treatment when soothing music is played in their rooms.” 1
In 2004, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation released a report based on 600 studies showing that design in hospitals, including sound and light, can have a dramatic effect on how fast and how well patients recover. The concept is to program the hospital with musical selections, one for every place, time and stage of recovery. From the intensive care unit to the chapel, music will be used in each space to speed up the healing process, assure optimal performance by hospital staff, and help visitors best pass the time and peacefully find their way around. The designers of today’s hospitals are thinking about the idea of ‘prescriptive sound’, sound designed for direct application to ease specific traumas, as part of an effort to create a new holistic healing environment.
Many diverse hospitals around the country are incorporating music as therapy in a variety of applications. At St. Agnes hospital in Baltimore , Maryland , critical care patients listen to classical music. “Half an hour of music produces the same effect as 10 milligrams of Valium,” reports Raymond Bahr, MD, director of coronary care. At Nathan Goldblatt Memorial hospital in Chicago , Ill , music precedes anesthesia in the operating rooms. The University of Chicago ‘s Medical Research Center combines music and anesthesia. “Music can reduce anxiety and stress, lower heart rates and blood pressure and help minimize cardiac complications after an operation.”
“Picture your hospital experience in the year 2084. Your first floor room opens onto a lush courtyard garden. The TV & soap operas have been replaced with the gentle sounds of healing music. Fresh scents of various flowers, spices and herbs waive through the room in prescriptioned response to your ailment. A nearby lamp bathes you in soft colors, which seem to soothe your pain. Barely audible words of encouragement, joy and humor come from the tiny speaker near your pillow. A fantasy? Not so say the participants at the Hospital As Temple conference which took place earlier this year in the Netherlands . Creating a healing environment was the theme of this second of a series of three conferences, organized by the Forum Health Care division of the Davidhuis Foundation in Rotterdam . These series of conferences endeavor to foster a new vision of medicine as it might be practiced in the Hospital of the future.”
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