Thursday, 20 March 2014

Fwd: Music in hospitals gets funding boost




 

 

 

Press Release

20th March 2014

 

NATIONAL YOUTH MUSIC CHARITY ANNOUNCES GRANTS OF OVER £3.5M

MUSIC PROJECTS IN HOSPITAL SETTINGS AMONG THE 69 PROJECTS BENEFITING

 

The National Foundation for Youth Music today announced grants totalling £3.5m to 69 music organisations around the country. This brings the total amount released this year to £9.2m. 

Youth Music supports music projects working with young people in challenging circumstances, from music-making for children in hospital settings, choirs featuring children in care, music mentoring in special schools and lullaby composition projects for young children with development delay. The charity currently supports over 400 projects across England, reaching out to more than 90,000 children and young people every year.

NEW MUSIC PROJECTS

The latest grants will kick-start a range of new music projects including ones for young carers, children living in rural isolation and female victims of trafficking.

Music in hospital settings

London-based charity Key Changes has been awarded a grant of £46,500 to run music workshops on adolescent psychiatric intensive care wards with a national provider of adolescent in-patient psychiatric services. Specially trained professional musicians and producers will support patients aged 13 - 18 with song writing and music production as part of the hospitals' structured therapeutic timetables. The activities are designed to contribute to the young peoples' wellbeing and recovery through developing creative, communication, social and technical skills, improving confidence and self-esteem, and opening new pathways to musical opportunities in the community after discharge from hospital.

Peter Leigh says:  "We are thrilled that Youth Music is supporting this project which will provide positive activities for young people detained in hospital at a pivotal time in their lives. The work will build on a pilot service delivered on boys' and girls' wards in Woking which has already seen improvements in patients' engagement with therapeutic activities and brightened the mood of the wards. Expanding the geographic scope of the project will establish a unique perspective on the impact of music in adolescent in-patient care, and develop a valuable evidence base that can be shared with the health and social care sector."

The 'Musicians in Children's Hospitals' project run by OPUS Music Community Interest Company (CIC), has been awarded a grant of £97,800 to bring weekly music-making to the bedsides of children and young people at Derbyshire, Nottingham and Leicester Children's Hospitals as well as children's wards at Kings Mill Hospital, Mansfield. Previous work by OPUS has demonstrated wide-ranging benefits for the patients, their visitors and staff.  Young patients who would otherwise miss out will now gain opportunities for self-expression, autonomy and musical education through regular music-making activity alongside OPUS Musicians.

Nick Cutts, Director of OPUS Music CIC, says: "We are delighted that Youth Music is supporting OPUS' development of our Music in Healthcare practice.  We have witnessed the wonderful impacts of music-making in children's hospitals over the past few years, a practice developed through European training partnerships led by the world renowned Musique & Santé in Paris.  We are looking forward to the continued exploration of hospitals as collaborative music-making venues, helping children and young people and their families to discover music as a relief from illness and as a long-term activity both during and beyond their hospitalisation."

Research indicates significant benefits

Research has shown that music interventions in hospital settings can have significant benefits. The results of a study by Indiana University School of Nursing published in January 2014 indicated positive outcomes for young cancer patients aged 11-24 who spent three weeks producing a music video. They found that patients were able to cope better with the difficulties presented by their medical condition and improved relationships with family and friends were also indicated.

Youth Music has also awarded grants to support Gloucester Music Makers research into how young children with cochlear implants experience sound and music. Artsdepot, London has received a grant to support their work with Noah’s Hospice, which has highlighted a lack of music provision for life-limited or life-threatened young people

REGIONAL FORMULA ENSURES FAIR DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS

There has been much public debate recently about regional funding allocations for the arts.

Youth Music grants are made available following an application process and are assessed on merit. The charity places a strong emphasis on its role as an intelligent funder, ensuring a fair distribution of funding throughout the regions of England. Over 45% of funded projects take place in the top 20% most deprived local authority areas.

Youth Music applies a regional allocation formula to its grant-making process which aims to provide an equitable balance of funding across the regionsThe funding does not merely relate to population densities but takes account of regional deprivation, ensuring that matters such as rural isolation and other geographical issues are taken into account.

Youth Music has also provided additional funding for its strategic ‘Musical Inclusion’ grant-holders, who are charged with identifying areas where there is little activity taking place (‘cold spots’), developing sustainable provision and working with emerging practitioners who are nurtured to deliver future activity.

Matt Griffiths, Youth Music’s Executive Director says: “We continue to do our best to target our funding where it is most needed. Part of this process is to ensure that we regularly update our information on where music provision is lacking geographically and to identify categories of young people in challenging circumstances who might otherwise miss out. In this round we have announced grants to help female survivors of child trafficking and others who suffer from severe psychiatric illness, along with young people living in rural isolation.  We wish all these projects well in delivering high-quality music making programmes that will have a very positive impact on these young people’s lives.”

 

ENDS

PICS ATTACHED: (relevant permissions received)

Caption: Opus Musician Richard Kensington with young hospital patient

 

Caption: A patient taking part in a Key Changes music workshop

 

ABOUT MUSIC IN HOSPITALS

·         Youth Music funds a variety of work in hospital settings, including work in neo natal wards in Gloucestershire (http://network.youthmusic.org.uk/learning/blogs/mark-harmer/working-premature-babies-and-their-parents-gloucester-hospital) and in Derbyshire hospitals (provided by OPUS) (http://network.youthmusic.org.uk/learning/blogs/cuttsn/sunshine-my-heart-–-film-documenting-impacts-opus’-music-children’s-hospitals-)

 

·         More information on the research relating to the benefits of music on young cancer patients can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cncr.28355/abstract

 

·         A BBC News report on this research can be found at:  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-25878958

 

ABOUT YOUTH MUSIC

·         Youth Music believes that music-making is life-changing and the charity wants the opportunity for music-making to be available to all children.   Every year, Youth Music provides more than 90,000 young people with the chance to take part in a local music project. 

 

·         Many of these children and young people face challenges in their lives including coping with disability, homelessness or living in care.  Others simply need help to develop their full musical talent and potential.

 

·         In addition to developing musical skills, Youth Music projects help young people to develop their creative and social skills, make positive contributions to their community and live happy, successful lives. Youth Music projects work across all music genres.

 

·         Youth Music currently supports over 400 music projects around the country

 

·         The charity knows that many more young people still need its help and continues to fundraise to realise its mission to ensure that all children and young people have access to life-changing music-making opportunities.

 

·         Find out more about the work of Youth Music by visiting www.youthmusic.org.uk

 

 

For enquiries about Youth Music please contact:

 

David O’Keeffe,

Media and PR Consultant,

Youth Music

 

E:   david.okeeffe@youthmusic.org.uk

T:   0207 902 1096

M:  07977 067576.

 

KEY CHANGES

For further enquiries about Key Changes, please contact

Peter Leigh

General Manager

Key Changes

 

E: peter@keychanges.org.uk

T:  020 7549 8172

M: 07985 249 398

 

www.keychanges.org.uk

 

OPUS Music Community Interest Company

For further enquiries about Opus Music, please contact

Nick Cutts

Director

OPUS Music Community Interest Company

 

E:  nick@opusmusic.org

T:  01773 861630

M: 07786 157515

 

www.opusmusic.org

 

 

 


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