HABRI Central - Resources: Hippotherapy concepts: A scoping review to inform transdisciplinary practice guidelines: About

The Human Animal Bond Research Institute (HABRI) is issuing a call for research proposals from institutions and organizations across the globe to investigate the health outcomes of pet ownership and/or animal-assisted interventions (AAI), both for the people and the animals involved. To learn more, visit https://habri.org/grants/funding-opportunities/ close

 
You are here: Home / Journal Articles / Hippotherapy concepts: A scoping review to inform transdisciplinary practice guidelines / About

Hippotherapy concepts: A scoping review to inform transdisciplinary practice guidelines

By N. du Plessis, K. Uys, T. Buys

View Resource (HTM)

Licensed under

Category Journal Articles
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hippotherapy, an equine-assisted service, uses the movement of the horse as a treatment tool. Hippotherapy is often used by occupational therapists, physiotherapists, and speech and language pathologists. To optimise hippotherapy and facilitate the development of transdisciplinary hippotherapy practise guidelines, this scoping review identified novel hippotherapy concepts used during hippotherapy interventions for clients with spastic cerebral palsy. AIM: To explore, identify, and describe concepts that constitute hippotherapy practices for clients with spastic cerebral palsy. METHODS: An exploratory descriptive qualitative research design, using Arksey and O'Malley's five stages of scoping review. RESULTS: We identified and tabulated 19 hippotherapy concepts. CONCLUSIONS: Hippotherapy is a complex intervention with multiple concepts. This review contributed to the development of hippotherapy practice guidelines for clients with spastic cerebral palsy. SIGNIFICANCE: Including hippotherapy concepts into hippotherapy practice will inform therapists, benefit clients, and contribute to future research.

Publication Title Scand J Occup Ther
Pages 1-17
ISBN/ISSN 1103-8128
DOI 10.1080/11038128.2023.2231562
Author Address Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
Additional Language English
Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Tags
  1. Animal-assisted therapies
  2. Hippotherapy
  3. Occupational Therapy
  4. open access
  5. physiotherapy
Badges
  1. open access