Effects of therapeutic horsemanship on caregiver stress scores of children with autism
Danielle C. Barron, Madison P. Craft, Emily R. Florek, Brianna N. Stanley, Alexis M. Stoner, Nancy A. Paschall, Sarah Newman, Kimberly I. Tumlin

TL;DR
This study shows that a therapeutic horsemanship program for children with autism can reduce stress in their caregivers over time.
Contribution
The study is among the first to investigate how therapeutic horsemanship indirectly affects caregiver stress in children with autism.
Findings
Caregivers showed a statistically significant reduction in stress scores after their child's participation in a 16-week therapeutic horsemanship program.
Five themes were identified from interviews, with four related to stressors and one linked to reduced stress due to the program.
The program's indirect involvement helped caregivers feel less emotional strain as their children developed life skills.
Abstract
Caregivers (primarily parents) of children with autism spectrum disorder (autism) report higher levels of stress, burn out and depression when compared to caregivers of children without autism. Interventions which incorporate animals have been efficacious in improving well-being for children with autism; however, investigating how caregivers are affected when their children are involved in such programs are a nascent field of inquiry. The objective of this pilot study is to characterize emotional strain and stress in caregivers of children with autism when their child attended a therapeutic horsemanship (TH) program. Thirteen caregiver-child dyads completed the study. Utilizing a mixed methods approach, caregivers completed the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS-21) questionnaire prior to and upon completion of their child’s participation in TH for a 16-week semester.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Family and Disability Support Research · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
