The study presented the establishment of 8 mother-infant group therapy which joined the potential of music with movement to work on postnatal depression treatment (Van et al., 2014). The author recorded all the sessions to obtain an overview of the interactions and to better follow the participants into the intersubjectivity moments, considered the interaction from mother to the infant. Van et al. (2014) study presented music as a consistent tool for bringing about restoration and vitality in mothers with severe postnatal depression. The sessions illustrated positive results and were statistically significant in mother-infant with severe depression (p<0.001) (Van et al., 2014).
The study focuses mainly on dyadic intersubjectivity and the potential group dynamics related to it, and the pleasure or joyfulness can contribute to providing feelings of self-efficacy and trust between mother-infant (Van et al., 2014). Music in a group had had the context possesses and the capability to persuade mothers and infants of their dancing talent and to encourage them to continue their opening dance of life (Van et al.,