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The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town

The study aimed to ascertain the prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders (PRMDs) among Western classical instrumentalists at the South African College of Music. Seventy-two undergraduate string, woodwind and keyboard instrumental students were approached during classes or individuall...

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Main Author: Thaele, Tatiana
Other Authors: Herbst, Anri
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: College of Music 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Thaele, Tatiana
author2 Herbst, Anri
author_browse Herbst, Anri
Thaele, Tatiana
author_facet Herbst, Anri
Thaele, Tatiana
author_sort Thaele, Tatiana
collection Thesis
description The study aimed to ascertain the prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders (PRMDs) among Western classical instrumentalists at the South African College of Music. Seventy-two undergraduate string, woodwind and keyboard instrumental students were approached during classes or individually and asked to complete a specially designed questionnaire. Data were sent to a statistician at the University of Cape Town Statistics Consulting Unit and the statistical package SPSS (Version 22) was used to analyse the data. Seventy-one (71) of the 72 questionnaires were returned. The average respondent was a 20-year-old, right-handed female who had been playing her instrument for 10.8 years; 88.8% of the respondents had experienced a PRMD at some point in their lives, 82.1% within the preceding 12 months and 46.3% had a PRMD at the time of the study. No correlation was found between the prevalence of a PRMD and age, gender, instrument type, number of years of playing the instrument, playing another instrument or the university programme, stream or year. A significant relationship was found between the instrument level and the current prevalence of PRMDs. The most commonly affected area was the shoulder followed by the back, neck, hand or wrist and fingers. The most commonly indicated duration was 1 week (35.3%), though many PRMDs had lasted for more than 2 years (19.6%); 46.3% of the PRMDs had a severity of 3/5 or higher, and 34.2% of PRMDs were both 3/5 or higher for severity and frequency. Only 3.7% of the responses indicated that a body awareness technique was being used regularly, while 37.4% of the answers indicated that the techniques had "never been heard of". Over half (51.7%) of respondents had consulted a health professional. Physiotherapists and Alexander teachers were the most frequently consulted professionals. Treatment strategies were non-invasive and mostly self-reliant and though most respondents felt that the treatment strategies had helped temporarily, there was little long-term satisfaction. This study concludes that the prevalence of PRMDs in students at the South African College of music is high and around half of the PRMDs affect the students' ability to play or perform their instrument at an optimum level. Actions can and need to be taken to reduce these values in future.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher College of Music
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20584 The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town Thaele, Tatiana Herbst, Anri Music The study aimed to ascertain the prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders (PRMDs) among Western classical instrumentalists at the South African College of Music. Seventy-two undergraduate string, woodwind and keyboard instrumental students were approached during classes or individually and asked to complete a specially designed questionnaire. Data were sent to a statistician at the University of Cape Town Statistics Consulting Unit and the statistical package SPSS (Version 22) was used to analyse the data. Seventy-one (71) of the 72 questionnaires were returned. The average respondent was a 20-year-old, right-handed female who had been playing her instrument for 10.8 years; 88.8% of the respondents had experienced a PRMD at some point in their lives, 82.1% within the preceding 12 months and 46.3% had a PRMD at the time of the study. No correlation was found between the prevalence of a PRMD and age, gender, instrument type, number of years of playing the instrument, playing another instrument or the university programme, stream or year. A significant relationship was found between the instrument level and the current prevalence of PRMDs. The most commonly affected area was the shoulder followed by the back, neck, hand or wrist and fingers. The most commonly indicated duration was 1 week (35.3%), though many PRMDs had lasted for more than 2 years (19.6%); 46.3% of the PRMDs had a severity of 3/5 or higher, and 34.2% of PRMDs were both 3/5 or higher for severity and frequency. Only 3.7% of the responses indicated that a body awareness technique was being used regularly, while 37.4% of the answers indicated that the techniques had "never been heard of". Over half (51.7%) of respondents had consulted a health professional. Physiotherapists and Alexander teachers were the most frequently consulted professionals. Treatment strategies were non-invasive and mostly self-reliant and though most respondents felt that the treatment strategies had helped temporarily, there was little long-term satisfaction. This study concludes that the prevalence of PRMDs in students at the South African College of music is high and around half of the PRMDs affect the students' ability to play or perform their instrument at an optimum level. Actions can and need to be taken to reduce these values in future. 2016-07-21T14:04:51Z 2016-07-21T14:04:51Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20584 eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Music
Thaele, Tatiana
The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
title_full The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
title_fullStr The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
title_short The prevalence of playing-related musculoskeletal disorders in selected Western classical music students at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town
title_sort prevalence of playing related musculoskeletal disorders in selected western classical music students at the south african college of music university of cape town
topic Music
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20584
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