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Music's Outstanding Benefits to Your Health: Seven Reasons to

Article:

Copyright 2005 Linda Slater Dowling

It's no secret that college students love music. Whether on your

way to class, heading to the gym or hanging out with friends,

music just makes us feel good. And depending on the style you

choose, it can do everything from revving up your energy for a

night on the town to calming your nerves before a big exam.

Music, though, is much more than a beat to tap your toes to or a

tune to sing along with. Increasing numbers of studies are

confirming that listening to music can have a real, positive

influence on your health. Here are seven of the most significant

health reasons to listen to some music today (as if you needed

even one more!).

1. Relieve stress. In one study, patients who had just been told

they needed surgery listened to a calming piece of music. Their

levels of the stress hormone cortisol were 50 percent lower than

patients who did not listen to any music, according to Roger W.

Wicke, Ph.D, instructor in Chinese herbology and director of the

Rocky Mountain Herbal Institute.

2. Increase energy. In some cases, such as during sports events

or other high-intensity exercise, high levels of cortisol are

desirable. Runners were able to produce high levels of cortisol

faster when they listened to energizing music with a fast pace.

3. Learn better. Bulgarian psychologist George Lozanov found

instruments like the violin, viola and cello) induced brainwave...

that students who listened to Baroque instrumental music (such

as J.S. Bach) while learning a foreign language had an increased

speed of learning and a greater degree of memory retention than

those who did not.

4. Become smarter (at least temporarily). Researcher Frances

Rauscher coined the term "The Mozart Effect." It refers to his

finding that study participants who listened to 10 minutes of

Mozart music performed 48 percent better on a paper-folding task

that was part of an intelligence test. The effect lasted about

10 minutes.

5. Relax. Alfred Tomatis, a French ear specialist, found that

listening to Baroque or classical music (particularly string

instruments like the violin, viola and cello) induced brainwave

patterns in humans that correlate with relaxation of muscle

tension and calm attentiveness.

6. Sleep better. Adults with sleep problems who listened to 45

minutes of soft music at bedtime reported a 35 percent

improvement in their sleep, according to a study published in

the February 2005 edition of The Journal of Advanced Nursing.

Not only did they sleep better and longer, but they also

reported less daytime dysfunction.

7. Protect your heart. A new study in the journal Heart found

that listening to fast music sped up participants' circulation

and breathing rates while slower music induced calm and led to a

fall in heart rate. When the music was paused, the participants'

signals of arousal (breathing rates, etc.) fell below where they

had been at the start of the study, which researchers say is

helpful in protecting against heart disease and stroke.

Want to Know More?

If music and health is a topic that interests you, there are

over 70 colleges and universities approved by the American Music

Therapy Association (AMTA) to offer degrees in professional

music therapy.

According to the AMTA, "Music therapy is an established health

care profession that uses music to address physical, emotional,

cognitive, and social needs of individuals of all ages." They

say a music therapist can help a person to:

Promote wellness Manage stress Alleviate pain Express feelings

Enhance memory Improve communication Promote physical

rehabilitation

About the author:

Linda Slater Dowling, a certified natural health professional,

is CEO & founder of the Nutritional Institute, home of the new

STUDENT FORMULA Natural Health Products. For a FREE e-book on

"Eating Right on a Budget" visit their Web site at

http://www.studentformula.com . You may also want to sign up for

their popular "Be Smart, Be Healthy, Be Natural" e-newsletter.