Doctors exploring how music benefits health - Action News
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Ottawa

Doctors exploring how music benefits health

Doctors Fraser Rubens and Carol Wiebe are known for performing concerts for charitable causes around Ottawa. On Tuesday they will give a lecture and performance on how music can benefit health.

Rubens and Wiebe are co-founders of Concert Docs, an organization of doctors with musical talents

Dr. Fraser Rubens is a classically trained tenor and Dr. Carol Wiebe is a pianist. (Darren Major/CBC)

Doctors Fraser Rubens and Carol Wiebe are known for performing concerts for charitable causes around Ottawa.

They often performfor dementia patients at long-term care centres and retirement facilities. Wiebe is a pianist and Rubens is a classically trained tenor.

"We'll often have people that are sitting there and look completely closed off, not participating not speaking back to you. They'll hear this familiar piece often it's Danny Boy ... their eyes light up, they start to sing," Wiebetold CBC's Ottawa Morning.

Rubens andWiebeco-founded Concert Docs, anorganizationof doctors with musical talents, in 2017.

On Tuesday theywill give a lecture and performance on how music benefits health, as part Music and Beyond an annual classical music festival held in Ottawa.

Musical benefits

"Participating in music doesn't actually require a lot of brain power, but it activates all parts of your brain, and you see that with people. Their emotions are there, they are able to move easier. People who can't walk can dance," Wiebe said.

Rubensa cardiac surgeonsaid there are studies that showbenefits for patients who listen to music as they are being put to sleep for surgery and as they are waking up.

"In those situations they've shown benefit in terms of anxiety, in terms of pain control and in surrogate markers what you measure in the blood for stress," Rubens toldOttawa Morning.

But music can help more than just patients, it can also help the doctors.

"If you can understand and sympathizewith the situation of the characters you can transmit that to the audience," Rubens said, adding that he draws on that emotion when dealing with patients.

"We as doctors, when we hear the disastroussituations or the characterizations of the problems of a patient, we can empathize with what they're doing, and we can express back we understand what it is, and I think its the same form of communication."

The event is taking place at noon on Tuesday at the Dominion-Chalmers United Church.