4.1 Article

Effect of music intervention on depression in graduate students

Journal

MUSIC EDUCATION RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 41-49

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14613808.2020.1847058

Keywords

Depression; graduate students; mental health; music intervention

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This study found that music intervention for graduate students can significantly reduce their levels of depression, demonstrating the intervention effect of music on depression levels.
Mental health is a crucial aspect of overall wellbeing, and anxiety and depression among graduate students have become grave concerns. This study aimed to determine whether listening to music can help graduate students to reduce their depression levels. For the experiment, 1,007 participants were selected from several universities in Guangxi, of which 56 completed the experiment. The participants were divided into a music group (n = 28) that listened to music of their choice for 30 min per week for 13 weeks and a non-music group (n = 28) that did not. After music intervention, the depression levels of the music group participants were significantly lower than that of the non-music group participants. This indicates that music has a significant effect on the depression levels of graduate students and that music could serve as an effective intervention to alleviate their depression.

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