<![CDATA[Twin Cities Music Therapy Services | Telehealth Music Therapy | Autism | Longterm Care | Groups | Pediatric | Mental Health - Blog]]>Sat, 27 Apr 2024 17:09:46 -0500Weebly<![CDATA[Join Our Team and Grow with Us!]]>Thu, 25 Aug 2022 15:31:48 GMThttp://twincitiesmusictherapyservices.com/blog/join-our-team-and-grow-with-usPicture
We are hiring a part-time Music Therapist position with the potential to grow as desired by the employee. The ideal candidate will be a creative, organized, compassionate therapist to support existing clients and new referrals as we continue to grow. This position would include one afternoon in the North Metro and one day in the Southwest and West metro. This caseload requires some after-school, weekday afternoon and evening availability.

Interested? Please view the full description for more information and how to apply.

part-time_employee_music_therapist_job_description_08252022.pdf
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<![CDATA[COVID-19 Omicron Wave Precautions]]>Tue, 18 Jan 2022 20:21:46 GMThttp://twincitiesmusictherapyservices.com/blog/covid-19-omicron-wave-precautionsOur team at TCMTS is dedicated to your health and the well-being of our greater community! 

What we are doing: Our entire team is vaccinated and boosted for COVID-19. We have continued to hold high standards throughout the pandemic, including N95 mask requirements for our team during all sessions, and a sanitizing protocol for instruments and session area. Our therapists are committed to testing after known exposures to COVID-19, and will offer options for virtual sessions while waiting for test results.

What our clients, families and staff are doing: We ask that all individuals, over the age of 5, who participate in the session to wear a mask, as they are able. We understand some of our clients are not able to wear a mask due to sensory or medical needs. Our therapists will wear a high-quality mask to keep those we serve who are unable to mask safe! We also ask our clients and families to notify us if anyone in the household or community program test positive for COVID-19.

Thank you!
TCMTS Reopening Plan and Procedure.pdf
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<![CDATA[Music Transcends Barriers and Provides Connection and Comfort for Seniors During COVID-19]]>Thu, 25 Feb 2021 19:35:33 GMThttp://twincitiesmusictherapyservices.com/blog/music-transcends-barriers-and-provides-connection-and-comfort-for-seniors-during-covid-19As we approach the one-year anniversary of COVID-19 here in Minnesota, we wanted to do a special feature on our elderly community, who have been significantly impacted by the pandemic. During this past year, our seniors have especially felt the emotional, mental, spiritual and physical impact from isolation and the trauma of so many layers of loss. Through these unimaginable challenges, music therapists have had the incredible privilege of navigating new ways of providing connection and support through music through virtual telehealth formats, and under layers of PPE. We are excited to share stories from two incredible music therapists, Megan Druckrey and McKenna Selissen, who have a great passion for working with older adults in our community.

Megan Druckrey, MT-BC

Music Therapist at Allina Hospice (MN)

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I've been a hospice music therapist working in the Twin Cities since 2007. When the pandemic first hit and everyone was scrambling to figure out how we were going to make music therapy sessions continue, I admit that I was very skeptical about the efficacy of Telehealth to deliver the power of music therapy. Weeks went by with phone calls to clients, families, and facilities trying to figure out how to proceed. During this time, our clients who were already isolated due to declining health were now facing a deeper level of isolation when friends and families could no longer pay them in-person visits. Ten months later, there are still many facilities that are not letting in families and support staff.

I went into my first Telehealth session with a patient feeling uneasy about my ability to connect via the computer. With the help of a hospice nurse assisting the connection, we soon experienced the power of music therapy when my patient's scowl melted into a beautiful smile, a relaxed affect, and a look of relief when she saw my familiar face and heard her favorite song. We could connect!

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Even though Telehealth is not the ideal way of practicing music therapy, I have learned over the many months that it is absolutely beneficial to the patients we can’t see in person yet. An added bonus of having Telehealth is that the clients can see our actual faces and mouths! I’ve been told that it's a welcome “look” to see my full face, even if it’s on my computer.

Some special moments I have in Telehealth sessions have included connecting the patient and spouse in a group music therapy session since family is not allowed at the facility, tailoring music therapy to reduce pain perception, and providing live music therapy support to a patient who is actively dying at a facility that doesn’t allow visitors. I’ve also had the privilege of providing special music for patients and families who are only allowed to have virtual funerals and memorial services. The element of live (virtual), supportive music has enhanced the depth and intimacy of these end-of-life rituals which are so important for the bereft.

Even though we music therapists can’t always be in-person to serve our clients and patients, with the help of Telehealth therapy, we can at least reach each other in these trying times and provide support in the best way we know how! I’m longing for the time where we can all be together in person safely, but until then, we care.

McKenna Selissen, MT-BC

Music Therapist at Twin Cities Music Therapy Services

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Over the past few months during the Covid-19 pandemic,  I have had the privilege of working with adults in long term care facilities through Virtual Music Therapy Sessions.  Throughout this time, long term care facilities have been hit the hardest with COVID-19. The inevitable strict visitor restrictions and daily precautions to keep these individuals safe, have also caused many adults to feel isolated, lonely, and anxious.  Their loved ones and other important visitors are no longer able to come in and they are often quarantined in their rooms when outbreaks occur. In addition, if they are able to leave their rooms, they are limited as to what they can do with other residents in the same facility. Virtual music therapy sessions have provided a way to connect, improve mood and promote movement and relaxation during this difficult time of isolation.  

During these virtual music therapy sessions, I have been fortunate to meet some of the most incredible individuals. Twice a week I see two small groups as well as several residents for 1:1 sessions.  Our small virtual music therapy groups provide a way for those that attend, to socialize with one another (even if it’s distanced), it creates opportunities for them to make their own choices throughout the session, as well as a way to express themselves in the group.  During our 1:1 sessions, the goals are similar. These sessions are focused on what each individual client needs in that particular moment. This could be playing a song that reminds them of their loved ones, having them choose a song that reflects how they’re feeling or just a song they want to hear that day, playing a compilation of songs to help them feel more relaxed, or simply getting to know one another during a time when connecting with others is so incredibly difficult. Many times, music therapy sessions are some of the only interactions they have with others outside of their facility since the pandemic began.  Virtual music therapy has made it possible to connect and bring joy to these residents during a time of isolation and struggle.

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<![CDATA[Working and Parenting in the Pandemic: There is No Such Thing as Balance]]>Wed, 09 Dec 2020 16:24:08 GMThttp://twincitiesmusictherapyservices.com/blog/working-and-parenting-in-the-pandemic-there-is-no-such-thing-as-balance
by Erin Lunde, MT-BC
​Sound Matters Music Therapy, LLC
I write this as we approach the holiday season for many. As a parent to a Minneapolis Public Schools student, we are tasked with 100% distance learning. The COVID-19 pandemic is a worsening threat. My 83-year-old mother-in-law is in our quarantine pod, and we five in my immediate family hardly ever step foot out in the community. Not until there is a vaccine available to us all.

Knowing this, we are bracing ourselves for an entire academic year here at home.
What does that mean for my kids? For me? And yet another challenge: What does it mean for my private practice?

I know I am not alone in this.
​In many senses, we are all doing this together. So how does a working family do such a thing? I asked some other music therapist parents out there how they’re handling this crisis.

“Our training in music therapy has helped because we have to be adaptive all the time,” says Sarah Woolever, MM, MT-BC. The mother of two boys, four-year-old Elgin and seven-year-old Declan, Woolever had to scramble this spring when the shutdown hit. She works as a music therapist at Children’s Minnesota in the NICU, and she had to take days off the first few weeks to accommodate her two little boys at home. She was able to have a nanny two days a week and have the grandparents watch the kids some, too, but her work at the hospital was necessary.

Woolever says that one of the harder changes that COVID-19 brought to her workplace was seeing families kept apart. Having a baby in the NICU has of course its own set of precautions and adding to that what the pandemic threatens kept many parents from even being able to see their baby for days while they quarantined elsewhere. Technology like FaceTime offers only so much connection, but likely any is better than none.

In all of this change, Woolever says that her boys’ relationship has changed for the positive. I see that in my own kids, too. My seven-year-old Sam and his sister, five-year-old Alice, play together much more often now than they fight. Their baby brother Frits is a shared object of affection for the two, which has been really nice.

Twin Cities Music Therapy Services music therapist Steve Sullivan, MT-BC notes that he is grateful for the time his family has spent together. “Work and school can be such a rat race,” Sullivan says, “where the minority of your time is actually spent all of us together. So this is a gift of time that we wouldn’t have had otherwise, with many good memories being formed.” Sullivan lives with his wife Laura and seven-year-old son, Jeffrey. “I am surprised how fast we all adapted to the change. If things ever get back to normal, that will be a big adjustment too.”

But I have noticed changes in my first grader that haven’t been all positive. The coronavirus, or just “the virus” is a big stressor for us all, but to my Sam it is an anxiety that keeps him from any little bit of live interaction with others. When we went to the park in nice weather, he wouldn’t leave my side. Yes, this was very safe and wise of him. But he also has trouble sleeping at night and worries about death.

Beth Engelking, MT-BC and Neurologic Music Therapist has a five-year-old daughter who also expresses anxiety about this time. “When I would leave for work,” Engelking says, “[my daughter] would try to block the door. She’d hang on me and cry. She said that she was afraid that I’d get coronavirus and die.” Engelking works as a music therapist at Gillette Children’s Hospital. In the spring, her hours were cut in half but are now back to normal. She sees patients in person and also shows a weekly Facebook Live music therapy session to help patients and community maintain some kind of social connectedness.

Because Engelking works out of the house and her husband, a software engineer, works from home, she is the one to do the errands and shopping. She showers upon coming home to try to avoid transmitting anything she might have picked up outside, but is then attending to her daughter, Amelia. “Amelia doesn’t have siblings to interact with, so she’s completely dependent on us for socialization,” Engelking explains. “She needs constant attention, especially from me, which makes it hard for me to get anything done. Amelia particularly hates it when I’m on the computer and she’ll do things like push buttons on the keyboard and shove me away from my desk.”

Now that the holidays approach, the struggle is new again. The spring was strange, to be sure, but there were only a few weeks of distance learning to endure before summer arrived. Summer happened for us with very little travel to see family and no camps or sports that we enjoyed in years past. After the first few weeks of school for my first grader, I confess I was heartbroken and discouraged. My little guy’s teachers seemed to be on top of all of the technology and are all very communicative. I am happy that they are trying to achieve community, even if it’s through screens. But my child requires peer modeling. He craves social support and outlet. Having recess with kids other than his little sister is necessary to him. In the first few days I adapted on the fly all of the tools I have for him; seating, writing, rugs, etc., to fit his needs. And I have a long list of other tools I need to acquire, all of which would be ready for him in the classroom.

I can’t provide him with the other kids or the teachers who know how to educate him. 

And what about work? The clients I had been serving in February and March were ready to start back up in August and September, but now that is certainly not going to happen. I see adults with development and intellectual disability in group homes and day programs. Right now, even if the pandemic were under control, I cannot see a way for my work to survive while my son and I “do” school. The other night while I was awake with my baby, I thought, “This is the year of No.” The year wherein I say No to anything that is not the family. Does that mean I cannot work outside the home for months to come? Maybe. I don’t know yet. My practice is surviving, but only just. Some of my contractors were able to provide outdoor sessions this summer. But with the cold weather, this has changed. Only a couple of my clients were able and willing to participate in virtual sessions over the summer and fall.

But telehealth is going to be the only way to go for now. Mike LimBybliw, MT-BC works at Twin Cities Music Therapy Services. He says, “In my work, I have had to shed my expectations even more than I used to. I have had to be a quick study with Zoom and Google Meet. I have had to rely more on recorded music than ever before and not beat myself up about it.” LimBybliw has three kids, a six-year-old son, a three-year-old daughter and an 11-month-old baby boy. He sees two music therapy clients per week via telehealth and has also taken on one Generation POUND®️ Group on Zoom. He has had to learn numerous new skills fast.

“I think it’ll take several months before I’m ready to reflect back on all the changes and things that I had to learn quickly without getting overwhelmed,” Beth Engelking says about her own work. There is a lot of flexibility that we music therapists inherently have, and the independence that our kids may hopefully learn in this time.

We just have to make it work, Sarah Woolever laughed. We’ve always been adaptive. We are music therapists who walk into rooms and have to assess the needs in a moment. In a sense, we had to do that with our families and our work in this time.
       
My kids and I have found something of a rhythm in all this. Somehow we are all still speaking to one another at the end of the day. Somehow we all continue to try our best. Patience and grace are hard skills to master, but if anything hopeful comes out of this crisis, maybe it’s the proof that we as music therapists, as parents, as people in this community, can do hard things.
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<![CDATA[New Scholarship Fund]]>Mon, 23 Nov 2020 22:30:13 GMThttp://twincitiesmusictherapyservices.com/blog/new-scholarship-fundIn the fall of 2020, TCMTS partnered with Minnesota Non-Profit, Springboard for the Arts to establish a Scholarship Fund. 

Our Goal is to provide full music therapy scholarships for 4 individual sessions for six months!

Scholarship Applicants must meet the following Criteria:
  1. Individuals who do not have access to State and County Funding for music therapy services (CDCS Waivers, CSG, and FSG)
  2. Individual/Family has experienced financial hardship due to COVID-19 and/or meets Income Requirements for Scholarship Program
  3. Individual demonstrates a need for music therapy services
You can make your Tax-Deductible Donation HERE--Thank you for your Support!
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