DEUTSCHE FORSCHUNGSAKADEMIE DER SAKRALEN MUSIK
DEUTSCHE FORSCHUNGSAKADEMIE DER SAKRALEN MUSIK
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Peter Hübner
Developer of the University

 

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MEDICAL EXPERTS

Prof. Dr. med. P. J. Rosch

Prof. Dr. med.
Gunther Hildebrandt

Nobel Laureate
Prof. Dr. I. Prigogine

Prof. Dr. med.
Ray Rosenman

Prof. Dr. J. Lynch

Prof. Dr. med.
H. Schadewaldt

Prof. Dr. med. H. Koeditz

Prof. Dr. med. A. Reznikov

Prof. Dr. med.
G. Gerassimowitsch

Prof. Dr. med. I. Gerhard

Prof. Dr. med.
Boris Luban-Plozza

Prof. Dr. med. Schachinger

Prof. Dr. med. K. Taubert

Prof. Dr. med. W. Dutz

Prof. Dr. med. D. Heuser

Prof. Dr. med. R. Nilius

Prof. Dr. med. Canzler

Prof. Dr. R. Feuerstein

Dr. med. L. Dossey

Prof. Dr. med.
Walentina Sidorenko

Dr. med. R. Shimshoni
Dr. med. I. Lazaroff

Dr. med. H. Schmidt

Dr. med. D. Griebner

Dr. med. R. Matejka

Dr. med. L. Dritz

Dr. R. Legnani

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KLINIKUM HOYERSWERDA

Dr. med. H. Schmidt on Peter Hübner

Dr. med. H. Schmidt

Medical Director
Children’s Hospital Hoyerswerda

Chairman of the
Chamber of Physicians
Hoyerswerda, Germany

Dr. med.
Helmut Schmidt
Medical Director Children’s Hospital


With reference to your enquiry regarding our experiences with Medical Resonance Therapy Music® in the local children’s hospital, I would like to comment as follows:

Medical Resonance Therapy Music® has been used in the children’s hospital for approx. 1 1/2 years.

So far, we have seen the following indications:


  1. With regard to patients

    Prematurely and newly born babies in the intensive-care therapy unit for newly born babies.

    We play the music to patients both in the incubator and in their cots.

    We see that restless children clearly become calmer in their general behaviour, which also shows in a stabilisation of their breathing and heart frequency. With the tendency toward apnea in prematurely born babies, we have the impression that rhythmically distinct music has a more positive effect.


    Intensive therapy patients with central-nervous disorders (encephalitis, drownin gaccidents, a condition following severe hypotension and reanimation of other genesis).

    For these children who are partly in a coma, and partly show an eretic condition, the patients are unable to comment themselves. The staff’s impression is that the patients generally calm down, and also show a better tolerance of the necessary intensive-therapeutic measures.

    Older children with psychosomatic disorders (e.g. Morbus Crohn, enuresis, anorexia, asthma bronchiale).

    These children clearly articulate themselves after listening to the music. In most cases, the music is perceived as pleasant, and leads to a better tolerance of their stay in hospital. The danger is that Medical Resonance Therapy Music® is used in single sequences that last too long, or is used too often during the day, which leads to the children being overtaxed, and subsequently rejecting the music.

    Repeatedly damaged children with a severe statomotoric retardation.

    These children frequently suffer from additional fits. During phases of a new adjustment of drugs for the fits, the children are restless an react to the music by clearly calming down.


  2. With regard to the interaction of parents – child

    Using Music Therapy in the treatment of children, produces a positive attitude in the parents towards the hospital, as this is perceived as part of the integrated care, and is gladly accepted. This becomes particularly apparent under the conditions of intensive therapy, where Medical Resonance Therapy Music® as a complementary measure to the purely medical technology is perceived as very pleasant.

    In the gentle care of premature babies, the “kangaroo method” plays a decisive role. During these times of intensive skin contact between mother and child, the music has an especially positive effect on the mother and child unit.

    In extremely worried mothers, the constantly present pain of separation grows into a crisis situation when the child is admitted as an in-patient. Using Medical Resonance Therapy Music® for these mothers, who sitting next to their child’s bed, listen to this music, leads to a very distinct and swiftly visible dispersal of stress. We also keep seeing the same effect during the course of the in-hospital stay.


Prospects for the Future:
  1. Spreading Peter Hübner’s compositions more widely would be sensible, so that we could avoid encountering unknown music in the hospital.

    I hope that these preliminary experiences are useful to the overall interest.

Dr. med. H. Schmidt