
Ep 55 Barbara Wheeler
🌬️ Sonya
Description
<p>Luke talked to Barbara Wheeler about her wide ranging experience in music therapy as a researcher, clinician, educator, and author.</p> <p>Barbara L. Wheeler, PhD, MT-BC, holds the designation of Professor Emeritus from Montclair State University, where she taught from 1975-2000. She initiated the music therapy program at the University of Louisville in 2000, retiring in 2011. She presents and teaches in the U.S. and internationally. She has a current faculty appointment at the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music, Katowice, Poland. She has been an active clinician throughout her career and worked with a variety of clientele. Barbara edited <em>Music Therapy Handbook</em> (2015); <em>Music Therapy Research: Quantitative and Qualitative Perspectives</em> (1995); <em>Music Therapy Research</em> (2nd Edition, 2005); is one of the editors of <em>Music Therapy Research</em> (3rd Edition; 2016); and is coauthor of <em>Clinical Training Guide for the Student Music Therapist</em> (1st edition, 2005; 2nd edition, 2017)<em>.</em> She is also the author of numerous other articles and chapters. She is a past president of the American Music Therapy Association and was Interview Co-Editor for <em>Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy.</em> Barbara received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the World Federation of Music Therapy in 2017 and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Music Therapy Association in 2019.</p> <p>In this interview they cover a wide range of topics, among them the issue of the importance of randomised control trials in building the evidence base for music therapy. the resources below include reference to several of these, as well as other articles referred to in this discussion.</p> <p><strong>The first two are examples of relatively small RCTs, done by a single investigator or team, in one setting. There are many examples of this type of RCT.</strong></p> <p>Ghetti, C. M. (2013). Effect of music therapy with emotional-approach coping on preprocedural anxiety in cardiac catheterization: A random