PMC:1142188 / 2180-3187 JSONTXT

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    2_test

    {"project":"2_test","denotations":[{"id":"15937557-14593283-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"14593283"},{"id":"15937557-7510806-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"7510806"},{"id":"15937557-8716327-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"8716327"},{"id":"15937557-11712719-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"11712719"}],"text":"Music therapy is an established allied health profession, and music therapists are Board Certified (MT–BC) by the Certification Board for Music Therapists (CBMT) upon the completion of at least an undergraduate degree in music therapy or its equivalent, a clinical internship (averaging 1040 hours), and successfully passing the CBMT examination. In hospice and palliative care, music therapists use methods such as song writing, improvisation, guided imagery and music, lyric analysis, singing, instrument playing and music therapy relaxation techniques to treat the many needs of patients and families receiving care. Needs often treated by music therapists in end-of-life care include the social (e.g. isolation, loneliness, boredom), emotional (e.g. depression, anxiety, anger, fear, frustration), cognitive (e.g. neurological impairments, disorientation, confusion), physical (e.g. pain, shortness of breath) and spiritual (e.g. lack of spiritual connection, need for spiritually-based rituals) (3–10)."}

    MyTest

    {"project":"MyTest","denotations":[{"id":"15937557-14593283-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"14593283"},{"id":"15937557-7510806-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"7510806"},{"id":"15937557-8716327-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"8716327"},{"id":"15937557-11712719-29618186","span":{"begin":1001,"end":1002},"obj":"11712719"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/testbase"},{"prefix":"UniProtKB","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/"},{"prefix":"uniprot","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/"}],"text":"Music therapy is an established allied health profession, and music therapists are Board Certified (MT–BC) by the Certification Board for Music Therapists (CBMT) upon the completion of at least an undergraduate degree in music therapy or its equivalent, a clinical internship (averaging 1040 hours), and successfully passing the CBMT examination. In hospice and palliative care, music therapists use methods such as song writing, improvisation, guided imagery and music, lyric analysis, singing, instrument playing and music therapy relaxation techniques to treat the many needs of patients and families receiving care. Needs often treated by music therapists in end-of-life care include the social (e.g. isolation, loneliness, boredom), emotional (e.g. depression, anxiety, anger, fear, frustration), cognitive (e.g. neurological impairments, disorientation, confusion), physical (e.g. pain, shortness of breath) and spiritual (e.g. lack of spiritual connection, need for spiritually-based rituals) (3–10)."}