What is Dance/Movement Therapy?
Download the ADTA BrochureDance/Movement Therapy is the psychotherapeutic use of movement to promote emotional, cognitive, physical, and social integration of individuals.
Dance/Movement Therapy is practiced in mental health, rehabilitation, medical, educational, and forensic settings, and in nursing homes, day care centers, disease prevention, and health promotion programs.
The dance/movement therapist focuses on movement behavior as it emerges in the therapeutic relationship. Expressive, communicative, and adaptive behaviors are used for group and individual treatment.
Body movement as the core component of dance simultaneously provides the means of assessment and the mode of intervention for dance/movement therapy.
Pioneering the Body-Mind Interface
- For over 50 years, Dance/Movement
Therapists have pioneered the understanding of how body and mind
interact in health and in illness.
- Whether the issue is the
will to live, a search for meaning or motility, or the ability to feel
love for life, Dance/Movement Therapists mobilize resources from that
place within where body and mind are one.
Serving People in Countries Across the Globe in:
Argentina, Australia, Great Britain, Canada, China, Croatia, Egypt, England, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Russia, Scotland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Taiwan.
Long History of Official Recognition by the U.S. Federal Government:
- Recognized by the Health
Care Financing Administration (HCFA) of the Department of Health and
Human Services as covered element of a partial hospitalization
program in Medicare facilities (1996).
- Title IV grant, number 90
AM 0669, Administration on Aging, Department of Health and Human
Services, Washington, DC (1993) Research - "Dance/movement Therapy with
Older Individuals Who Have Sustained Neurological Insult." Findings
suggested dance/movement therapy improved the
functional abilities of the participants on a number of variables, i.e.,
balance, rhythmic discrimination, mood, social interaction and increased
energy level.
- The Office of Alternative
Medicine of the National Institute of Health awarded one of its first
exploratory research grants to investigate dance/movement therapy for those
with medical illnesses. (1993)
- Dance/movement therapy included
and defined in the Older American Act reauthorization Amendments. PL
102-375. (1992).
- Dance/movement therapy represented
on President Carter's Commission on Mental Health (1977).
- Dance/movement therapy included
in resolutions to implement Education for All Handicapped
Children Act, PL 194-42 (1975) amended several times (1986, 1990), and
later renamed Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
- Federal Civil Service Classification
for Creative Arts Therapists (art, dance, music & psychodrama).