1. The feasibility of occupational therapy using Zones of Regulation™ Concepts in an equine environment.
- Author
-
Peters, B. Caitlin, Gabriels, Robin L., Schmid, Arlene A., Pan, Zhaoxing, Merritt, Tamara, Hoffman, Arielle, and Hepburn, Susan
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL therapists ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,SOCIAL skills ,CAREGIVERS ,HORSES - Abstract
Introduction: The current paper aimed to assess the feasibility of a modified intervention protocol named "Occupational Therapy using Zones of Regulation Concepts in an Equine Environment" (OT-ZOR Equine). Methods: A single arm A-B feasibility study was conducted, involving 14 autistic youth ages 6-13 years who first received 10-weeks of occupational therapy without horses (OT-ZOR Clinic) followed by 10-weeks of OT-ZOR Equine. Results: All participants completed the study and attended 95% of OT-ZOR Equine sessions. Occupational therapists maintained 91% fidelity to the OT-ZOR Equine intervention protocol and there were no serious adverse events. All participants' caregivers and study occupational therapists rated being satisfied or very satisfied with the OT-ZOR Equine intervention. Youth demonstrated improved self-regulation following participation in the OT-ZOR Clinic and OTZOR Equine interventions. However, participants' social functioning only improved after OT-ZOR Equine. Discussion: This study demonstrated that OT-ZOR Equine is feasible to implement, acceptable to recipients and providers, and may offer additive benefits in social functioning compared to occupational therapy intervention without horses. The current study provides a foundation for future efficacy research aimed at quantifying additive benefits of integrating horses into occupational therapy for autistic youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF