After three weekly riding sessions, 32 participating veterans
lowered their scores for symptoms of the disorder, known as PTSD,
researchers report in Military Medical Research.
Moreover, after six weeks, participants experienced a clinically
significant reduction in their symptom scores. In other words, they
were capable of doing things - such as going to a supermarket - that
they might have been unable to do when they started the program.
“It was delightful to find out our intervention helped the way we
hoped it would,” said lead author Rebecca A. Johnson, a professor of
nursing and veterinary medicine at the University of Missouri in
Columbia.
As many as one in five recent combat veterans develops PTSD, an
overactive fear memory that triggers disturbing thoughts, feelings
and dreams, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
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Some veterans suffering from PTSD are so fearful that they rarely
leave their homes, Johnson said in a phone interview.
“Veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder have high anxiety, and
to have (them) focus on learning a skill is diverting. They’re very
focused,” she said. “Riders are mastering horsemanship skills. It’s
not a pony ride.”
During the therapeutic horseback riding sessions in Missouri,
veterans learned and practiced grooming, interacting with the
animals and riding them with a leader and two side walkers. Most of
the participants were men, and they ranged in age from 29 to 73.
Many were veterans of the Vietnam War who had been experiencing
posttraumatic-stress symptoms for decades, Johnson said.
Johnson estimated a similar program would cost $300 to $400 per
person in Missouri, though it could cost substantially more in other
parts of the country, and in some cases, riding centers might
provide scholarships or reduced rates for veterans, she said.
“Some of these military veterans had been experiencing PTSD symptoms
for 40 or 50 years,” she said. “It may be important for healthcare
systems to support therapeutic horseback riding as a viable
complimentary therapy.”
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Dr. Gary Wynn, a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda,
Maryland, said he “would be reticent for a broad recommendation,
especially if it involves mobilizing resources from healthcare
organizations.”
Wynn, who was not involved with the study, said he would want to see
evidence that the improvements last long after the treatment is
done.
A prior recent study of yoga in people suffering from PTSD showed
that one of the key determinants of long-term benefits was continued
yoga practice, he said.
“The benefit of some complementary and alternative-medicine
treatments has been likened to the vacation effect,” he said by
email. “One receives the majority of the benefit while on vacation,
and that quickly dissipates after the vacation is over.”
Previous studies have shown that alternative treatments – from yoga
to fly-fishing, to acupuncture and meditation – have been shown to
be of some benefit to veterans with PTSD while they are getting
treatment, Wynn said.
Though he knows little about the cost of therapeutic horseback
riding, Wynn said the cost “could be significant” and difficult to
scale.
“I could see this as a part of a specialty program, a referral
program for those that have failed other treatment modalities, like
the 30-day or 60-day programs out in some idyllic nature setting
where there were a series of therapeutic modalities combined to
address treatment-resistant PTSD,” he said. “Therapeutic riding for
everyone probably isn't an option.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2GBeOPv Military Medical Research, online
January 19, 2018.
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