30/12/2025
Music lifts the spirit improves Quality of life
The role of music in calming and engaging New Zealand dementia patients will be studied by University of Auckland scientists who foresee a greater role for the low-cost “treatment”.
“Family members know the big difference that music can make – singing and listening to music can evoke responses when little else does,” says Dr Samuel Mehr, director of The Music Lab at the University, who will lead the study.
Listening to music can calm dementia patients or unlock memories and feelings that don’t otherwise surface. For Maōri with dementia (mate wareware), waiata can be an important facet of care.
Expanding the role of music as a tool for treating patients would contribute to New Zealand’s response to the global health crisis caused by soaring cases of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
University of Auckland Professor Lynette Tippett and Dr Carolyn Fredericks, an expert in Alzheimer's neuroimaging at Yale University, will collaborate on the research.
Caregivers will be surveyed multiple times per day about musical activities, patient mood, patient distress, and their own mood, to determine links between musical activities and well-being in people with dementia, as well as the effects on caregivers.
The Music Lab is a collaboration between Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland and Yale University in the US.
Read more about the study here: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/news/2025/12/05/scientists-investigate-music-as-dementia-treatment.html