Abstract
This article is based on an international randomised controlled trial (RCT) in psychiatry investigating the effects of music therapy on difficult to treat psychiatric clients who show a lack of motivation to attend therapy. Previous research has shown that music therapy can be an alternative therapeutic treatment for this client group and this RCT aimed to address this observation.
The RCT was a collaboration between music therapists from different therapeutic cultures - Norway, Austria and Australia. Consequently, the music therapy provided was influenced by different training backgrounds. To provide a common methodological basis the therapists also focused on resource-oriented principles. These were especially developed for the study to ensure treatment fidelity, yet first of all have an important impact on the practical work.
Five case vignettes depict how different therapists made use of these principles and in which ways these affected the therapeutic process. It will be shown how these principles serve as a methodological tool for reflecting the therapist's attitude towards the client.
The relevance of the principles in terms of the establishment of a therapeutic relationship as well as the importance of a resource-oriented focus both in long-term and short-term therapeutic settings is highlighted. Finally, it can be assumed that resource-oriented principles exist at least implicitly throughout music therapeutic cultures and that these emphasise the relationship between therapist and client.
