Benefits of Equine
Therapy

Proven by
Washington University Research
Team
Hippotherapy
is
'Therapy
Disguised as
Fun'
for
Children with
Cerebral Palsy
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Chagrin
Falls, OH - June 25, 2008
Researchers from the Washington
University Program in Occupational Therapy, funded by a grant
from the Horses & Humans Research Foundation, recently
completed a breakthrough study on the therapeutic impact of
equine therapy for children with cerebral palsy.
The study found that
hippotherapy, the use of the rhythmic movement of a horse to
effect therapeutic gains, improves both head and trunk
stability and upper extremity function in children with spastic
diplegia cerebral palsy.
"Beliefs about the positive
effects of hippotherapy are strongly held, but not yet fully
supported by objective evidence," reports Tim Shurtleff,
occupational therapist and lead researcher. "We have shown that
hippotherapy is a therapeutic tool that makes a measurable and
visible difference in basic skills that form the foundation of
most functional activities of everyday
life."
The year-long study primarily
involved measuring stability changes in children with cerebral
palsy after 12 weeks of hippotherapy treatments. The team used
a motorized barrel and Video Motion Capture to challenge and
measure the changes in motor control that might have been
learned on a horse.
Molly Sweeney, President of the
Horses & Humans Research Foundation, was most impressed
that children actually sustained the benefits of hippotherapy
for several months after their riding sessions stopped. "The
subjects were incorporating improvements from hippotherapy into
their daily life," says Sweeney. "They actually maintained a
continuum of measurable improvement-better head and trunk
stability and improved control of their arms as they reach-even
months after their hippotherapy sessions ended. That was a
really exciting revelation for
us!"
Shurtleff, on the other hand, was
most surprised at the magnitude of the "effect sizes", a
statistic that compares results of interventions across
different types of experiments. "It is often difficult to say
that statistical significance is equal to clinical
significance. With effect sizes this large, the changes are
visible to casual observation and likely indicative of clinical
change."
"These findings will go a long
way in getting hippotherapy the recognition it deserves," says
KC Henry, Executive Director of the Horses & Humans
Research Foundation. "The Washington University project is our
first funded project, and has set an impressive standard, with
their rigorously developed research design leading to impactful
objective results. We were thrilled to have solid evidence
substantiating what so many therapists already
believed."
The research team plans to follow
up this study by conducting a randomized clinical trial (RCT)
of hippotherapy. "A RCT is the gold standard for evidence of
medical treatment efficacy. If we can pull of a successful RCT,
the efficacy of hippotherapy will no longer be in question,"
says Shurtleff.
The changes observed by the
Washington University team were confirmed by anecdotal evidence
from families of subjects. "One mother told me that her five
year old son no longer hangs out at the edge of the playground
watching when the other kids are climbing the slide and playing
on the equipment," says Shurtleff. "He was always too unstable
and afraid of falling. After his 12 week hippotherapy
intervention he now climbs up the slide and plays more on the
equipment than before. Without any urging from anyone, he just
started doing it."
"Many people in the equine
industry know that the movement of the horse is therapeutic
because they experience it themselves both in their physical
and their psychological health," says Shurtleff. Thus, many
choose to donate money to and support hippotherapy/therapeutic
riding centers. Shurtleff encourages them to look beyond that
end. "Their money might be better leveraged to donate to
research to develop more evidence of the efficacy of
hippotherapy," he continues. "Then, insurance companies will no
longer be able to credibly deny coverage. Their money may
become a catalyst for much more money to become available for
therapy for kids who need it than if it is only spent once to
support one child or one
center."
"This is a therapy tool that
makes a difference," concludes Shurtleff. "While it is fun, it
is not recreation. It is therapy disguised as
fun."
Horses
& Humans Research
Foundation
Horses &
Humans Research Foundation is the only foundation dedicated
solely to facilitating universal understanding and appreciation
of the significant influence of horses on humans. The
foundation promotes research that will directly benefit program
participants and educate the public, including parents, donors,
insurance companies, the medical community, etc., regarding the
benefits of equine assisted
activities.
For more information visit:
www.horsesandhumans.org
,
Contact KC Henry, Executive Director,
at (440) 543.8306
or info@horsesandhumans.org
.
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