Skip to content

Condition: Post with Page_List

Listen
Search
Please enter at least 3 characters.

Latest Stories

CHICAGO (WBBM NEWSRADIO) -- Music is proving to be just the right medicine for healthcare providers.

"Music is essential during crises. It is part of psychological first aid," said Dr. Borna Bonakarpour, professor of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.


Northwestern University said that while Northwestern Medicine health care providers cared for patients with COVID-19, 37 musicians from Northwestern Medical Orchestra (NMO), Feinberg School of Medicine and Bienen School of Music cared for the doctors, nurses and other health care workers with a virtual performance of an excerpt of the soothing Mozart Piano Concerto No. 20. They call themselves the Northwestern Virtual Orchestra.

VIEW SCHEDULE: Reimagined Taste of Chicago To Offer Virtual Cooking Demos, Music Events

"The piece we chose had to be comforting to help with stress relief during the pandemic," Bonakarpour said. 

Bonakarpour, who plays the piano in the concert, organized the collaboration. By July 1, the first video had been viewed about 6,000 times. The video will be on the Northwestern Medicine TV channel for all the staff to watch.

NMO was formed in 2018 by first-year medical students to provide an instrumental musical experience for members of the Northwestern medical community on the Chicago campus.

RELATED: Free Daily Music Concerts Brought A North Kenwood Block Together During Time Apart | Difference Maker: Victoria Vitale, Music Therapist At Advocate Children's Hospital

Bonakarpour also has launched a pilot tele-music program for patients admitted to the Northwestern Medicine neurology unit. This three-month pilot program, which is performed in collaboration with a team of clinically oriented musicians and therapists, aims to reduce symptoms of anxiety, depression and isolation.

According to Northwestern University, during this program, the intervention team will plan a combination of musical pieces and improvisations to be played remotely for patients through an iPad. The content of each intervention is different and depends on patient's condition (anxiety, isolation, pain, disorientation, etc.)

"This program is great for staff members, patients and musicians who have not been able to perform in public during the pandemic," Bonakarpour said.