Drum Sessions Protect Employees from Burnout
Thu Feb 19,
By Alison McCook
All study participants were
employees at a nursing home, an industry with an unusually high turnover rate.
When staffers at one
Moreover, during the year
following the drumming sessions, 49 fewer employees resigned than had the
previous year, saving the facility nearly $400,000 in costs associated with
training new hires.
These findings suggest that
incorporating drumming circles into the lives of employees can be a
cost-effective means of helping workers and reducing turnover, both in
long-term care and other industries, study author Dr. Barry Bittman
said.
"We're not just
talking about long-term care," said Bittman, who
is based at the
Workers in long-term care
typically exhibit a turnover rate estimated at between 40- and 100-percent per
year, which research shows is largely a result of emotional factors, such as
burnout.
During the study, Bittman and his colleagues asked 112 employees at the Wesbury United Methodist Retirement Community to
participate in drumming circles for one hour per week for six weeks. Before and
after the six-week sessions, participants completed questionnaires designed to
assess their mood.
Participants came from all
parts of the facility, and included nurses, dietary workers, accountants,
administrators and housekeepers.
In the drumming sessions,
participants performed a series of exercises, including beating the drum to the
rhythm of their own name, copying the rhythm of others' names, representing
their feelings via drumbeats, playing along to music, and discussing ongoing
stresses with the group, if they so chose.
Immediately after the
sessions were completed, people showed a 46-percent improvement in mood. Six
weeks after the sessions ended, the same people showed a more than 62-percent
improvement in mood, suggesting that emotional boost can continue long after
the music has ended.
In an interview with
Reuters Health, Margaret Bailey of the
This connectiveness,
in turn, enables people to feel supported by others, talk about their problems
and cope with them before a situation escalates into something that makes
workers want to leave their jobs, Bailey noted.
According to Bittman, making music may bring people together better than
other group activities, such as group retreats or team sports, because it is
more cost-effective and accessible to people of all physical abilities.
Furthermore, music may inspire more openness to others by asking people to
adopt "a level of communication (they) weren't accustomed to," he
noted.
Bittman added that he uses similar
techniques with patients living in long-term facilities and their families, as
well as those with cancer and other chronic illnesses.
The study, funded by
Yamaha, appears in the journal Advances in Mind-Body Medicine. Bittman and his colleagues discussed the results Thursday
during a press conference in
SOURCE: Advances in
Mind-Body Medicine, Fall/Winter 2003.