A multi-center randomized controlled trial with critically ill adults aged 50 years and older admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) found that twice-daily slow-tempo music (60 to 80 beats per minute ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Playing slow-tempo music may be an acceptable and feasible strategy for reducing delirium among patients staying ...
A multi-center randomized controlled trial with critically ill adults aged 50 years and older admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) found that twice-daily slow-tempo music (60 to 80 beats per minute ...
Music can influence blood pressure, increasing or decreasing the systolic (upper) and diastolic (lower) pressure based on the tempo and volume of the song and other factors. Slower, softer music tends ...
As if staying in an intensive care unit isn’t traumatizing enough, a large proportion of people treated in ICUs develop delirium. Hallucinations make their hospital stay more traumatizing, and can ...
Exercise scientists have shown that moving to slow workout music actually offers more benefits than listening to a fast tempo song. It’s a sweaty gym studio, the music is booming. You’re desperately ...