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What is Singing?

Singing is considered to have positive effects on health. A study based on self-reported data of students participating in choral singing found perceived physical benefits including increased lung capacity, improved mood, stress reduction, as well as perceived social and spiritual benefits.

Reported Purpose & Efficacy

Reasons and Efficacy
Purpose # of patients
# of patients with evaluations Efficacy
Major
Moderate
Slight
None
Can’t tell
Stress 12 4 Efficacy_moderate
Treat my mood condition(s) 11 2 Efficacy_major Efficacy_slight
Other 5 1 Efficacy_major
General health 5 2 Efficacy_moderate Efficacy_slight
It's a part of who I am. 2 0
A way to lift my spirits 1 0

See all 38 patients currently using Singing

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Reported Side Effects

Side effects as an overall problem

Severe
0
Moderate
0
Mild
1
None
4

Commonly reported side effects, conditions, and hospitalizations associated with Singing

Anxious mood 1
Self hatred or loathing 1

Reported Stop Reasons

Why Patients Stopped Using Singing (multiple reasons could be selected)
Reason # Patients Percentage of patients
Other 1   Other: 100%

See all 1 patient who’ve stopped using Singing

Currently Using Singing

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0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0
0
0

Stopped Using Singing

A bar graph

0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0
0
0

Reported Adherence, Burden & Cost See details from patient evaluations

Adherence

Taking treatment as prescribed

Adherence of Singing

Always
2 40%
Usually
3 60%
Sometimes
0 0%
Never
0 0%

Burden

Difficulty being on treatment

Burden of Singing

Very
0 0%
Somewhat
0 0%
A little
3 60%
Not at all
2 40%

Cost

Paid out of pocket

Cost of Singing

$200+
0 0%
$100-199
0 0%
$50-99
1 33%
$25-49
0 0%
< $25
2 67%

Report created on May 24, 2012.