"I try to keep in
here and now, keep the child in here and now and be there for
the family, musically and emotionally."
Glenn Schifano music
therapist
(CBS) Glenn Schifano is a music
therapist - one of five thousand in the United States. He "performs"
at Schneider Children's Hospital in Long Island and his audiences
are children with life threatening diseases like cancer and heart
disease.
He plays not for money, not for fame, but to heal
and offer hope.
"It seeks to dispel some of the frustrating,
suffering that goes on here," Schifano tells CBS Sunday
Morning correspondent Dan Rather of his music.
"A
child that really can non-verbalize some of their angst, some of
their pain can really verbally, through music, express that," he
says. "It can be very healing."
Schifano started his rounds
on this day with 5-year-old Jake Brower, who less than two hours
earlier had his 10th brain operation.
"To put the shaker in
his hand and then to get him to shake on his own, I think it was
empowering for him and also empowering for parent," Schifano says.
Baby Sekura is suffering from a head injury and Schifano is
playing for both the baby and her father.
"You can just
imagine dad feeling overwhelmingly anxious -- they both got into
this kind of lull and that is the hope, what you wanna do. That's,
you know, the baby to feel that the father is calm, the mother is
calm, there is safety there, there is security there," Schifano
explains.
When it comes to 18-year-old Ashley Crawford, who
suffers from leukemia, Schifano doesn't have to figure out what
music she needs.
She was spelling it out to me: 'I wanna
learn 'Ode to Joy.' Teach me 'Ode to Joy.' If it was last thing she
did on this planet that is what she wanted to do, that was it. Give
her that joy," Schifano says.
For sick children well enough
to live at home but still needing check ups, Schifano is the first
person they meet in the hospital, even before their doctors
"Children come in, kids sign in, get blood drawn and go on
to treatment area. That finger stick room dictates what happens that
day," Schifano says.
If music therapy only makes treatment
less painful and sickness more bearable, it would seem to be enough.
But music therapy does more: it sometimes can save lives. Just ask
Dr. Mark Atlas, who heads the hospital's transplant unit, where the
survival rate for children is only 40 percent. "The children in
transplant tend to have difficulties with high blood pressure, both
from medications and from pain. Relaxation, enjoyment, good positive
mental state can help decrease blood pressure which actually
improves their outcome," Atlas explains.
Music can sometimes
improve the outcome even with the youngest of the young. Ashton
Webster arrived a perilous 10 weeks early, weighing less than one
and a half pounds
Up is bad; down is good in terms of the
baby's breathing. The more Schifano sang, the more Ashton's mother
and hospital staff could see "down"
All those differences
were reason for hope said Dr. Dennis Davidson, chief of the neonatal
unit.
"These small, premature babies while they are in their
hospital stay can develop neurologically," Davidson claims. "The
sucking reflex becomes better, they gain weight faster and
ultimately they are out of the hospital faster."
Music
therapy began not with children, but World Wart II soldiers
suffering from battle-induced stress and trauma. Today music is
medicine for all ages. At Beth Israel Hospital in New York City, a
leading music therapy training center, nurses and aides often join
in to help the elderly handle fear or depression.
Premature
children hear whooshing sounds to sooth their too quick
transition from their mother's womb to the real world.
Even
the therapist handle their own stress with music.
Schifano
knows that melodies can not forestall the finality of death. Despite
all medical and musical efforts, he sees both the old and the young
sometimes finally succumb.
"I try not to get concerned with
that," Schifano says. "I try to keep in here and now, keep the child
in here and now and be there for the family, musically and
emotionally."