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On Tuesday 14 March we were joined by health and care professionals and some of our musicians at the Pierhead Building to celebrate our 75th year and showcase the genuine human connections made through live music for people with dementia, mental health and serious illness.
In celebration of our 75th anniversary our President, operatic baritone Sir Thomas Allen CBE, shares his reflections since becoming involved with the charity in 2005.
This month we were thrilled to feature on Givto, which has helped to raise vital funds to share the healing power of live music.
As a charity founded in the same year as the NHS and working to improve health and wellbeing through live music where people may not otherwise get to experience it, we have come a long way. But we still have further to go to ensure that live music is an integral part of health and care across the UK.
It is with great sadness we share the news that Sylvia Lindsay has passed away. Sylvia was the Director for the Council for Music in Hospitals, later to become Music in Hospitals & Care, for 20 years from 1972 to 1992.
There are a few different ways to raise money at no cost to you while you do your Christmas shopping online. Use any of these sites to help share the healing power of live music every time you shop.
We're so grateful for the support of groups like Buxton Musical Society, who stage Handel’s Messiah every three years in December. They have generously chosen to fundraise for Music in Hospitals & Care at their last two performances.
On Thursday 3 November, following our Annual General Meeting, the trustees were joined by some of our volunteer ambassadors, musicians and supporters at London Canal Museum for a special event.
Music in Hospitals & Care wants to hear from people with lived experience of mental health or mental health professionals to join a new steering group.
Caroline Barker has been a Senior Charge Nurse in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh’s Intensive Care and High Dependency Units for over 25 years. Our musicians have recently been able to go back into critical wards at the hospital for the first time since before the pandemic.