Music as a healing methodology amongst adolescents in a disadvantaged community, in South Africa

Main Article Content

Wandiswa Dlamini
Raisuyah Bhagwan
Fathima Dewan

Abstract

Music is one of the most relatable things adolescents. They listen to music almost every day without realising its therapeutic potential. This study aimed to investigate music's healing properties and its usefulness in helping adolescents with psycho-social challenges. Listening to music is an activity that provides a range of physical and psychological advantages (e.g. stress reduction, relaxation, depression reduction) to people of various cultures and ages; it is a type of treatment that everyone, regardless of financial status, may obtain. The study explored the use of music as a healing and developmental intervention with adolescents from troubled backgrounds. The study was conducted using a qualitative approach with 15 adolescents from Sweetwater’s, a disadvantaged community in Pietermaritzburg in KwaZulu-Natal. The study followed the process of thematic analysis. Themes that emerged from the data focused on the personal meaning of music in adolescents’ lives and the benefits of music. The findings from the study presented the benefits of music for distressed adolescents dealing with a variety of social issues.

Article Details

How to Cite
Wandiswa Dlamini, Raisuyah Bhagwan, & Fathima Dewan. (2024). Music as a healing methodology amongst adolescents in a disadvantaged community, in South Africa. Journal for ReAttach Therapy and Developmental Diversities, 7(4), 30–39. https://doi.org/10.53555/jrtdd.v7i4.2259
Section
Articles
Author Biographies

Wandiswa Dlamini

Department of Community Health Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Durban University of Technology, Durban 4000, South Africa. 

Raisuyah Bhagwan

PhD, Department of Community Health Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Durban University of Technology, Durban 4000, South Africa. 

Fathima Dewan

PhD, Department of Community Health Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Durban University of Technology, Durban 4000, South Africa. 

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