Equine-Assisted Therapeutic Intervention in Institutionalized Children: Case Studies
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MDPI
Abstract
A significant number of institutionalized children have behavior problems. Socio-emotional
skills are fundamental for their adaptation and success throughout life and are usually weakened in
this population. Equine-assisted services (EAS) are a form of therapeutic mediation that facilitates
and requires the practitioner’s participation, contributing to the promotion of various psychomotor
and socio-emotional dimensions. This study was developed during 17 sessions of EAS with a
psychomotor intervention, which took place individually and weekly and lasted approximately
45 min, with three institutionalized children. A quantitative and qualitative assessment was carried
out before and after the intervention to study the effects of an EAS intervention on socio-emotional
competencies in the three institutionalized children. There was an improvement in skills, with
an impact on intrapersonal skills and marked improvement in self-regulation and self-control, in
addition to an improvement in the intentionality of movement and adequacy of gesture to the context.
This type of intervention underlies a renewed educational and therapeutic approach, contributing to
mental health promotion in this population
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Citation
Matias, A. R., Santos, G. D., & Almeida, N. (2023). Equine-Assisted Therapeutic Intervention in Institutionalized Children: Case Studies. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 2846. MDPI AG. Retrieved from http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20042846