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Katherine is our model for
hippotherapy. A special thankyou to her and her mom.
Hippo therapy is taken from the
Latin word for horse. Hippo Therapy benefits a wide range of adults and children with
varying degrees of physical, cognitive and or emotional disabilities. Cerebral Palsy being
one of those. It originated in Germany in the 1600's before it came to North America in
the 1960's. There are now many accredited centers through out the United States and
Canada.

Why it Works
A horses gait (walk) is close to a
human gait. The forward movement with the hip/pelvis moving left to right, back and forth
and tilting forward and backward is the same as when a human walks. By sitting passively
on the horse the childs pelvis receives all the movement as if they were walking. It
reproduces all of the components of walking by experiencing normal movement. Because
children with cerebral palsy usually do not develop in the same manner as a child without
disabilities IE: sitting, pulling up, crawling, kneeling, furniture walking, then walking,
their brain does not know what it is supposed to feel like. The brain perceives these
different stages of development and records it. If someone doesnt go through these
different stages of development, the information isnt there. When you place a child
with CP or another type of disability where this information was not "input" or
was lost by a head injury, being it a stroke or other type of disability it is another way
to get the information to the brain. I always explain it as "It kick started her
brain".

Equipment used with
Hippo Therapy
There is different equipment used
for hippo therapy. A child could ride bareback with a sheepskin bareback pad. This allows
the Therapist to put the child in many different positions on the horse. This could be
facing forward, backward sideways. Laying down or over the horse. Once again, these
different positions give the brain different information while working different muscle
groups. The therapist may use wedges for a child that is trying to improve their balance
or harness with handles for the child to hold onto to support themselves when working on
improving trunk control. This type of hippo therapy is usually done with someone
"driving" the horse from behind as well as with the two side walkers. Children
that have trunk control and can ride unassisted may use a saddle. As always with the side
walkers also. As well as learn how to use reins. Rings and balls are also used to help
with reaching and stretching. Depending on what the therapist is working on and what
therapy they want to accentuate, as well as the abilities of the child determines which
equipment is used.
Benefits of Hippo
Therapy
Besides the obvious benefit that
its fun! It also helps to gain confidence, self esteem, flexibility, balance and
muscle strength. The smooth, gentle, rhythmic movements of the horse helps to reduce
spastic muscles, and build muscle strength, which in turn improve balance and sitting,
that in turn helps to improve speech. because it improves the balance, which improves
coordination of breathing, which improves better lung capacity, which improves speech. It
builds the confidence as they gain better control of their bodies and become more aware of
the world around them. Self esteem is improved as they reach their goals that were/are
set. Most kids dont horse back ride so it also is a huge self esteem booster when
their friends find out that they "ride".
Accredited vs Non
Accredited
It is highly recommend that if you
do have your child in a hippo therapy program that it is accredited. What that means is
they have gone through a process that has high standards and practices that must be
followed. There are licensed therapists that will be assigned to your child. A formal
assessment is done and a individual program is set up for your childs specific
needs. The child is usually not required to be able to sit unassisted on the horse. The
Therapist is a back rider until the child is able to sit unassisted on the horse. They
provide side walkers on each side of the horse for added safety. Most insurance companies
recognize the accredited programs and will cover it as therapy. Some programs also offer
scholarship programs and parents pay what they can afford. Most sessions last for 30
minutes and are done 1-2 a week. A helmet is required. It doesnt have to be a
special riding helmet, bike helmets are usually acceptable.
A program that is not
accredited is usually group oriented or the child must be able to sit unassisted. Since
they usually dont have licenced therapist that work one on one with the child they
are not usually aware of the therapeutic aspects of hippo therapy. An excellent web sit is
http://www.NARHA.org
This is for the North American Riding for the Handicapped Association. It is not only a
extremely informative site it also has all the centers in the United States and Canada
listed. They are listed by region. The centers that have a * next to their names are the
accredited programs. They also are listed with address, phone numbers and web pages if
they have one.
Credit for
this report goes to Vicki Hendrikson our speical thanks for your time and effort you put
into CPN and to Katherine for letting us use her as a model.
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Last
updated 11/22/99 |