Dementia: Music Therapy

(asked on 29th November 2021) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask Her Majesty's Government, further to the reply by Lord Kamall on 22 November (HL Deb, col 586), whether support will be made available for musicians to train as music therapists (1) to increase the number of practitioners able to deliver music interventions for dementia patients, and (2) to meet the ambitions for social prescribing as set out in the NHS Long Term Plan.


Answered by
Lord Kamall Portrait
Lord Kamall
This question was answered on 7th December 2021

Research suggests music can help people with dementia reduce the need for medication, address agitation and help people and their families cope better with symptoms. The Chief Social Worker’s office have worked with the charity Music for Dementia to raise awareness among social workers and social care workers, on embedding music therapy in personalised social care plans for people living with dementia and their carers. NHS England and NHS Improvement, in collaboration with the National Academy for Social Prescribing and Music for Dementia, facilitated a series of webinars on the topic of creative support and supported Music for Dementia to produce guidance on music prescriptions for social prescribing link workers. We will publish a new dementia strategy in 2022, which will explore the role of arts and music-based interventions.

Health Education England have promoted the allied health professions, including music therapists. This included a Career Changer campaign with a number of music therapists with a musician background. We are continuing to deploy social prescribing link workers across the

National Health Service and have exceeded the first target of 1,000 link workers by March 2021. As of September 2021, there were over 1,400 new link workers in place and we are working towards the target of at least 900,000 people referred to social prescribing by 2023/24.

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