Events

Upcoming Events


October 9, 2024
Description:The NIH-funded Music4Pain Research Network announces a webinar seriesfocused on understanding how music can reduce pain and improve pain management. This series will highlight the design of high-quality mechanistic research studies and review the current evidence on hypothesized mechanisms. All webinars are free to attend, but registration is required. Our first webinar, titled ‘Music Selection in Mechanistic Research’, will take place on October 9 from 11:00 a.m.to 12:30 p.m.EST. The session will cover critical considerations for music selection in research studies, such as music preference, music-related memories, recorded versuslive music, and how these considerations may differ between laboratory and clinical settings.

Past Events


June 11, 2024
Description: The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health (U.S. NIH) is hosting a one-day virtual workshop titled "Arts for Health’s Sake” on Tuesday, 11 June 2024, from 11:00 am – 4:00 pm US Eastern Standard Time. This workshop will feature a keynote address followed by a moderated Q&A session in the morning. In the afternoon, there will be several, private breakout sessions that will discuss predetermined questions around the state of the science as well as the barriers/facilitators to research in the following spaces: (1) Implementation-ready art-based interventions for health (2)Using art to disseminate health knowledge (3) Art-based implementation strategies. The workshop will conclude with a report-out from each breakout session to the general audience.


May 6, 2024
Description: The Louis Armstrong Center for Music and Medicine is commemorating its 30th anniversary in 2024. Using this milestone as an anchor point, on May 6, 2024, we hope to convene and stimulate clinicians, researchers, and therapists to present some new and novel achievements in reflecting on how far the practice and field of music therapy in medicine and music and medicine has come. Acknowledging many of our past speakers and conferences, this symposium will set the course for the future decades. We will target influential trends in disease management such as the inclusion of, Healing breath, Oncology, AI, with definition and explication of how Diversity will be addressed. Additional focus on various landmarks in practice development such as population-based care: NICU, pediatrics, older adults and clinic-based mental health will stimulate our celebration. Enriching areas will include live, music-based care in maintaining well-being as it is our hope that leaders, influencers, researchers, and developers will attend. This event is meant to be cross-audience in order to facilitate high-level learning that will move the field forward across generations and cultures.


May 13-16, 2024
Description: The NIH/NIA-funded Music & Dementia Research Network will host the in-person “Music, Brain Health, and Dementia Summit” at the AARP headquarters in Washington, D.C. on May 13-16, 2024. We are inviting approximately 50 experts, graduate students, and postdoctoral trainees from multiple disciplines (e.g., neuroscience, psychology, music therapy, engineering, neurology, computer science, advocacy) to work together in a series of workgroups and workshops focused on mechanistic studies of music in the context of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and AD-related dementias (ADRD). During the summit, we will 1) identify research gaps and opportunities, 2) generate novel ideas and hypotheses, and 3) catalyze and seed collaborations at the interface of music, brain, and mobile brain-body imaging. The outcome of the summit will be a publication that will outline research priorities.


December 14-15, 2023
Virtual
Description: This workshop aimedto highlight accomplishments from the last 6 years in advancing scientific research on music and health, develop a blueprint for the next phase of research, and further build the research community.The workshop was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and jointly organized by NIH, the NEA, the Renée Fleming Foundation, and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The workshop wascochaired by Dr. Francis Collins, former NIH director, and Ms. Renée Fleming, a renowned American soprano, both of whom deliveredkeynote speeches.There weresix scientific sessions during the 2-day workshop: (1) Research on the Science of Music; (2) Research on Music Therapy and Music Medicine; (3) Research on Music Education and Health; (4) Future Research Directions; (5) Networks and Capacity-Building of an Integrative Health Research Community; (6) Integration of Music-Based Interventions Into Health Care Systems. Each sessionfeatured a short musical performance highlighting the scientific theme, followed by scientific talks and discussions with eminent speakers and panelists to enrich the content and perspectives for general discussions. .


September 18, 2023
Kennedy Center Concert Hall
Desciption:As individuals, throughout our communities, and across the nation, we have had little time or opportunity to address our mental health, grief, and struggles of loneliness and isolation over the last years. In that spirit, the Surgeon General Vice Admiral Vivek H. Murthy will recognize heroic work to support mental health and well-being during the last years of the pandemic. September 18 in the Concert Hall, he awards the Surgeon General’s Medallion—the highest honor he can present to a civilian—to individuals or organizations who exemplify unusual acts of compassion, innovative mental health efforts, and exceptional leadership in advancing the well-being of their communities. 


March 27, 2023
Description:Are you interested in innovating the healthcare system to address social determinants of health and provide holistic, person-centered care? Join us to learn about the growing national social prescribing student movement that seeks to change the culture of how we approach health.


November 30, 2022

Sound Health: Renew/Remix Concert
October 2, 2022
Kennedy Center Concert Hall
Description:Hosted by Renée Fleming and Dr. Francis Collins, the eventfeatureda roster of world-class artists in performance and conversation with music therapists, researchers, and scientists.

Sound Health: Renew/Remix
Music-Based Health Interventions: The Path Ahead

October 3, 2022
Kennedy CenterSkylight Pavilion
Description: Panel discussion on current evidence and research gaps in the field of music-based interventions, considerations and efforts directed at filling those research gaps, and how this work can inform future reimbursement for care considerations.


August 25, 2021


June 18, 2021


March 31, 2021
Related Resource:


January 26, 2021


September 12, 2019


January 18, 2019

Music and the Mind:Shaping Our Children’s Lives Through Music Engagement
September 7-8, 2018


January 26–27, 2017


June 20, 2017

NIH-Kennedy CenterMusic and the MindPerformance and Workshops at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
June 2–June 3, 2017

NIH Workshop on Music and Heath
January 26–27, 2017

This page last reviewed on October 3, 2024