Animal Assisted Psychotherapy (AAP)
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Transcript Animal Assisted Psychotherapy (AAP)
Animal Assisted
Psychotherapy (AAP)
Dr. Peter Claydon
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Animal Hugger
Outline
Historical Antecedents
Contemporary Perspectives
Benefits and Limitations of AAP
Examples and Descriptions of
Canine and Equine Assisted
Psychotherapy
Historical Antecedents:
Animal Assisted Therapy
9th c Belgium: disabled patients + farm animals
1792 Quakers in York, England: psychiatric in-patients + birds
and rabbits
1860 Florence Nightingale, Notes on Nursing: the sick/invalids
+ small pets/bird in a cage
Late 19th c Germany: epilepsy + birds, dogs, cats and horses
Early 20th c US, Secretary of the Interior, Franklin Lane:
psychiatric patients + dogs
Early 20th c Sigmund Freud: psychiatric patients + dog “Jo-Fi”
End of WWII, Army Air Corps Convalescent Center New York
Serendipitous Discovery in
the 1960s
Boris Levinson, MD: 9 yr old patient + dog “Jingles”
– the birth of animal assisted psychotherapy (“Pet
Therapy”)
OSU Psychiatric Hospital, Drs. Corsen + Corsen:
socialization skill development of adult and
adolescent inpatients + dogs
Contemporary Research
Barker & Dawson (1998): institutionalized patients and
anxiety + dogs
Barak et al. (2001): elderly patients with schizophrenia +
dogs and cats
Kovacs et al. (2004): middle-aged patients with
schizophrenia + small animals
Cobaleda-Kegler (2006): female juvenile offenders + cats
Limitations: no comparison groups
Trotter, Chandler, GoodwinBond and Casey (2008)
“A Comparative Study of the Efficacy of Group
Equine Assisted Counseling with At Risk Children
and Adolescents”
Group 1: Equine Assisted Counseling (EAC)
Group 2: school-based group counseling (“Kids
Connection”)
Results showed EAC superior to school counseling
on all measures
Limitations….
Benefits of AAP
1. Symptom reduction, e.g. Depression; Anxiety;
Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder;
Conduct Disorders; Substance Abuse; Body Image
Disorders; Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder;
Schizophrenias; Autism Spectrum Disorders
2. Functional improvement in areas such as selfesteem; social and relational abilities; learning (e.g.
memory, problem solving, decision making)
Limitations of AAP
1. Not suitable for all patient populations, e.g. severe
Anti Social Personality Disorder; certain psychotic
states; serious dementia or brain damage
2. Some animals may not be suited for AAP
Accrediting & Certification
PET PARTNERS (formerly The Delta Society), est.
mid-1970s <deltasociety.org>
EFMHA, Equine Facilitated Mental Health Association, a
subsidiary of PATH International Professional
Association of Therapeutic Horsemanship International,
est. 1969 (formerly NARHA) <pathintl.org>
EAGALA, Equine Assisted Growth and Learning
Association, est. 1999 <eagala.org>
CBEIP, Certification Board for Equine Interaction
Professionals, circa 2010 <cbeip.org>
Local Equine Assisted
Therapy Programs
H.E.A.R.T.S Adaptive Riding Program (Santa
Barbara)
Windhorse Equine Assisted Therapy Center (Santa
Ynez Valley)
Reins of H.O.P.E. (Ojai)
HEARTS Therapeutic Equestrian Center
www.heartsadaptiveriding.org
Accredited by PATH International
Windhorse Equine
Assisted Therapy Center
Formerly Santa Ynez Valley Therapeutic Riding
Program
www.syvtherapeuticriding.org
• H.E.L.P. - Horse Enlightened Learning and Psychotherapy
Reins of H.O.P.E.
• reinsofhope-ojai.org
• Executive Director: Julie Sardonia, M.A., L.M.F.T.
Local Canine Assisted
Therapy
Child Abuse Listening and Mediation (CALM):
calm4kids.org
Pilot Program, principal investigator Brenda
Murrow, PhD candidate:
[email protected]
My Therapy Dog, Pixie