Creative Arts TherapyTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 215, Segment 3
Jan 20, 2016 • 20m
Guest: Melissa Walker, Creative Arts Therapist at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence at Walter Reed Medical Center Imagine a display of handmade masks painted with American flags or words written across the forehead or cheeks. Some have eyes. Some don’t. They’re the first exercise in a four-weak treatment program for military service members suffering from PTSD, brain injury and other psychological issues. The National Endowment for the Arts and the Department of Defense are so committed to this kind of therapy that they recently expanded a program called the Military Healing Arts Partnership at various military facilities including the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland.

Reducing Stress on PreemiesJan 20, 201620mGuests: Joerg Graf, PhD, Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at University of Connecticut and Associate Department Head for Graduate Research and Education; Adam Matson, MD, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Immunology, University of Connecticut and Neonatologist at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center More than ten percent of babies in the US are born prematurely. That’s an enormous number of families who experience the stress of an impossibly tiny preemie hooked up to monitors and tubes in Newborn Intensive Care. It’s stressful for the babies too – and a study underway at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center aims to find out if that stress might be linked to some of the health problems premature infants experience later in life.
Guests: Joerg Graf, PhD, Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at University of Connecticut and Associate Department Head for Graduate Research and Education; Adam Matson, MD, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Immunology, University of Connecticut and Neonatologist at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center More than ten percent of babies in the US are born prematurely. That’s an enormous number of families who experience the stress of an impossibly tiny preemie hooked up to monitors and tubes in Newborn Intensive Care. It’s stressful for the babies too – and a study underway at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center aims to find out if that stress might be linked to some of the health problems premature infants experience later in life.