AutismInsights
Back to research database
Emerging

Long-term Music Therapy With Young Autistic Children: Mothers' Perspectives.

Journal of music therapy2025

Knapik-Szweda Sara, Thompson Grace

What this study means for families

This study interviewed seven mothers whose autistic children participated in music therapy for at least three years. The mothers shared that music therapy helped their whole family feel better and gave their children a chance to be themselves. They noticed improvements in their child's thinking, social skills, emotions, and body awareness. The sessions also helped mothers feel relief and better cope with parenting challenges.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Research summary

This qualitative study examined seven mothers' perspectives on long-term family-centered music therapy (minimum 3 years) for their autistic children. Through semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis, researchers identified two main themes: (1) long-term music therapy fosters subjective well-being in child and family through shared joy, opportunities for authentic self-expression, and daily life support; and (2) parent-perceived developmental changes including cognitive, social, emotional skills, body awareness, and strength development. Mothers reported experiencing relief and catharsis during sessions, helping them cope with their child's different developmental trajectory. The study highlights music therapy's potential multifaceted benefits for family well-being through emotional expression and capitalizing on children's strengths.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Key findings

  • 1

    Long-term music therapy fostered subjective well-being in children and families through shared musical joy and authentic self-expression opportunities

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Supports family-centered approaches and highlights psychological benefits beyond skill development
  • 2

    Parents perceived improvements across multiple developmental domains including cognitive, social, emotional skills, and body awareness

    Confidence: limitedRelevance: Suggests comprehensive developmental benefits but relies on parent perception rather than objective measures
  • 3

    Mothers experienced relief and catharsis during sessions, helping them cope with parenting challenges

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Important for understanding family support benefits and parental well-being outcomes

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Clinical implications

Family-centered music therapy may provide holistic benefits for autistic children and families when implemented long-term. Clinicians should consider both child developmental outcomes and family well-being when planning interventions. The approach may be particularly valuable for supporting parental coping and family resilience.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Limitations

Small sample size of seven mothers limits generalizability. Relies solely on parent perceptions without objective developmental measures. Lacks comparison group or standardized outcome measures. No information provided about music therapy methodology or therapist qualifications.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Original abstract

The perspective of parents and their expectations of music therapy have been previously reported in the literature. However, research into parent perceptions of long-term family-centered music therapy is lacking. This qualitative study delves into the experiences of mothers with autistic children who engaged in a minimum three-year-long, family-centered music therapy program. Through semi-structured interviews with seven mothers, employing Reflexive Thematic Analysis, this study aims to comprehend the nuanced ways these parents experienced long-term music therapy for their child and family.

Two main themes emerged from the analysis, each with related subthemes. Theme 1-Long-term music therapy fosters subjective well-being in the child and family, includes three subthemes: (a) sharing joy through musical interactions supports well-being; (b) an opportunity for the child to be themselves; and (c) music as a support for daily life. Theme 2-Parent perceived changes to their child's development, includes six subthemes: (a) focusing on the whole child; (b) supporting cognitive development; (c) supporting social skills; (d) supporting emotional skills; (e) supporting body awareness; and (f) developing child strengths and resources. These mothers shared that long-term music therapy sessions with their child supported them to experience a sense of relief and catharsis, which they considered helped them to cope with the challenges they faced when adapting to the different developmental path of their children.

Additionally, the analysis of the parent interviews reveals their perceptions that long-term music therapy can bolster family well-being by facilitating emotional expression and capitalizing on the child's strengths. This qualitative study therefore highlights the potential multifaceted benefits of long-term music therapy, providing valuable insights into its possible role in enhancing the lives of autistic children and their families.

View Original Paper

View original paperFull paper via publisher (may require subscription)

Evidence Grade

Emerging

limited

Grade assigned by AutismInsights based on study type and published abstract.

Study Details

Journal
Journal of music therapy
Year
2025
PMID
40438908
DOI
10.1093/jmt/thaf008

MeSH Terms

HumansMusic TherapyMothersFemaleAutistic DisorderAdultMaleQualitative ResearchChild, PreschoolChild