Friday, April 13, 2007

Music Helps Heal Stroke Victim

Here's yet another example of how music helps heal the body and mind. Read this article from NewsNet5:

Stroke Victim Helps Other Patients Heal Through Music
Man Says Music Was His Greatest Motivation In His Recovery


POSTED: 1:15 pm EDT April 12, 2007
UPDATED: 5:27 pm EDT April 12, 2007

CLEVELAND -- A man who spent weeks in the hospital fighting back from a stroke is now giving back to the place that helped him recover.

These days, Alan Scheussler walks into MetroHealth Medical Center, but he spent almost two months at Metro, barely able to move, reported NewsChannel5's Alicia Booth.

"I was in pretty bad shape. I couldn't talk, I couldn't see, I couldn't move. I thought I was gone, actually," said Scheussler.

Scheussler had a major stroke during bypass surgery in April 2004. It wasn't until a year and a half later that Scheussler's longtime passion would become his biggest motivator to get well.

"I couldn't give up on the guitar and I still can't. Music was my life before this happened to me," he said.

Scheussler's doctor, John Chae, said he noticed right away what the guitar did for his patient.

"When Alan had this motivation to play the guitar, he found new life," said Chae.

Scheussler is sharing his new life with other patients at Metro. Working as a therapist, he volunteers three times a week teaching other brain injury patients how to rehabilitate themselves through music.

Matt Dematte, 18, now plays better than he did before his car accident, and the tunes are a great break from his usual therapy.

"I know what patients want when they're down here because I know what I wanted when I was here," said Scheussler.

The music sure seems to heal and it keeps the patients even more interested in their rehabilitation.

"Now, as a scientist, I don't have the data to prove that it does, but as a clinician, you say, 'You know what, there's something here,'" said Chae.

You might wonder why someone who went through such a painful struggle would willingly come back to a hospital, but according to Scheussler, the answer is pretty simple.

"Volunteering here at MetroHealth is helping me as much as the patients here, I believe," he said. "I can see what music therapy can do for a patient, and it's amazing."

Scheussler was an electronic designer before his stroke. He said he will not be able to go back to his old career, so he's starting training for a new one as a medical laboratory technologist.

He is also continuing to volunteer at Metro.