Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
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Creating art, viewing it, and talking about it provides a way for people to cope with emotional conflicts and increase self-awareness. It also lets them express unspoken and often unconscious concerns about their illness. The art therapist uses pictures, art supplies, and visual symbols, as well as an understanding of behavior, to help patients address their own personal concerns and conflicts.
Art therapists work with patients one on one or in groups. The art therapist provides the materials needed to make paintings, drawings, sculptures, and other types of artwork. This type of therapy may help you express feelings about cancer through art. Your art is then used to help you talk about your emotions and concerns. In another form of art therapy, you may view pieces of art, often in photographs. You can then talk with a therapist about what you see.
Art therapy is a body-mind therapy. Many experts have seen and documented major benefits among people who have done art therapy. These include improved mood, fewer depression symptoms, and better overall quality of life. Doing art therapy or making art on your own can also serve as a form of distraction. Thinking about and creating art can help to distract you from pain and anxiety.
Many art therapists believe this type of therapy works because creating art affects brain wave patterns and the substances released by the brain. It helps people express hidden emotions. It reduces stress, fear, and anxiety. It can also provide a sense of freedom.
Creating art with an art therapist helps you express painful thoughts or memories possibly related to your cancer diagnosis. This may help you cope with the diagnosis. In conventional mental health therapy, people talk with a counselor. Talking about traumatic or painful experiences that may be hidden in the subconscious mind is an important part of the healing process. In much the same way, making a drawing or painting of an emotion or event can serve as a tool. It can help the art therapist guide you through the process of dealing with similar concerns.
Art therapy is safe and may help people with cancer deal with their emotions. As part of your cancer treatment plan, art therapy has the potential to be pleasant and productive. It should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Talk with your healthcare provider for more information.
Dance therapy uses movement to improve mental and physical well-being. It's a recognized form of complementary therapy used in hospitals and cancer centers.
Several studies suggest that dance therapy helps people:
Develop positive body image
Improve self-concept and self-esteem
Reduce stress, anxiety, and depression
Decrease isolation, chronic pain, and body tension
Increase communication skills
Encourage a sense of well-being
For some cancer patients, dance therapy also works as exercise. But it has not been studied enough to know if there are any special health benefits to cancer patients, or to confirm the effects on prevention of or recovery from illness.
The physical benefits of dance therapy as exercise are well documented. Physical activity increases special neurotransmitter substances in the brain (endorphins). These create a state of well-being. And total body movement such as dance helps with other body functions. These include circulatory, respiratory, skeletal, and muscular systems. Dance therapy can help you stay physically fit and enjoy the pleasure of creating rhythmic motions with your body.
There are no known negative side effects of dance therapy. But dance is a form of exercise. Always talk with your healthcare provider before starting any exercise program. This is especially needed if you have a chronic condition. Your healthcare provider can evaluate whether the physical movements of dance therapy might be harmful to you. It should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team.
Music therapy uses music to promote healing and enhance quality of life. It's a complementary therapy that is used along with other cancer treatments. It helps patients cope mentally and physically with their diagnosis. Music therapy may involve listening to music, making music, singing, and discussing music, along with guided imagery with music.
Studies have shown the positive value of music therapy on the body, mind, and spirit of children and adults. Researchers have found that music therapy used along with medicines that ease nausea and vomiting in patients getting high-dose chemo can help ease physical symptoms. When used in combination with pain relievers, music has been found to decrease the overall intensity of the patient's pain. This can sometimes result in a reduced use of pain medicine.
Music can also help with the following:
Ease stress, apprehension, and fear
Improve mood
Lower heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rate
Ease depression
Ease sleeplessness
Ease muscle tension and provide relaxation
Music therapists believe that:
Rhythm is helpful. Our muscles, including the heart muscle, synchronize to the beat of music. For example, some classical music approximates the rhythm of the resting heart (70 beats per minute). This music can slow a heart that is beating too fast.
Self-expression in music therapy can reveal subconscious thoughts and feelings. It can be therapeutic in the same way psychotherapy has shown to be therapeutic.
The creative process of making art whether it's through music, painting, sculpture, or dance can be beneficial.
Music therapy can be incorporated into many different environments. People listen to music alone or in groups. This can be done with trained therapists or without. It can be as simple as someone listening to a song. Specially selected music can be broadcast into hospital rooms.
Music therapists design music therapy sessions for a wide variety of needs. Some of the ways music is used as therapy include:
Music improvisation
Receptive music listening
Song writing
Lyric discussion
Imagery and relaxation
Performance of music
For example, in a music therapy session that is specially designed to promote self-expression, the therapist might create a musical and emotional environment that encourages you to respond by revealing personal experiences or feelings. The session might have speech and drama as well as music. Or the therapist might use singing and discussions. By playing music with lyrics, the therapist can encourage you to make up words that are then formed into a positive, unique song.
Music therapy, as part of your cancer treatment plan, has the potential to be pleasant and productive. It should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Always talk with your healthcare provider for more information.
Imagery is a form of distraction. It involves mental exercises designed to stimulate the mind to influence the health and well-being of the body. It uses visualization methods to help reduce stress, anxiety, and depression. It may also help manage pain, lower blood pressure, and ease some of the side effects of chemotherapy.
There is no scientific evidence showing that imagery affects cancer cells. Rather, it's a relaxation method, like meditation, that has other physical and psychological effects on the body. In some cases, imagery has been found to:
Ease nausea and vomiting from chemotherapy
Ease stress
Enhance the immune system
Help with weight gain
Combat depression
Reduce pain
There are many different imagery methods. One popular method is called palming. This involves placing the palms of your hands over your eyes and first imagining a color you link with anxiety or stress (such as red). You then imagine a color you link with relaxation or calmness (such as blue). Visualizing a calming color may make you feel relaxed. That in turn may improve your health and sense of well-being.
Another common imagery method is known as guided imagery. Guided imagery involves visualizing a specific place where you feel safe, calm, and happy. It may be used to relax and reduce stress and anxiety. Or it may be used for a specific goal, like reducing nausea or slowing your heart rate.
Imagery methods, as part of your cancer treatment plan, have the potential to be pleasant and productive. But they should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Always talk with your healthcare provider for more information.
People seeking relief from symptoms of cancer and its treatment often consider alternative therapies. Don’t be afraid to discuss complementary and alternative treatments with your healthcare providers. They have heard such requests before. Let your healthcare providers know if you are interested in an alternative mode of therapy. When you meet with them, bring a list of questions so you don’t forget what you want to ask. For support, consider bringing a family member or friend to the appointment.