# Farm-based therapeutic horticulture for people living with dementia: the Vicenza Farm Project

**Authors:** Leonardo Dalla Costa, Francesca Meneghello, Costantina Righetto, Giulio Senes

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/frdem.2026.1772835 · 2026-03-17

## TL;DR

The Vicenza Farm Project uses farm-based therapeutic horticulture to support people with dementia by fostering social connection and purpose through structured gardening activities.

## Contribution

This paper introduces a novel therapeutic horticulture program in Italy, emphasizing its potential to address unmet psychosocial needs in dementia care.

## Key findings

- Farm-based therapeutic horticulture can restore purpose and social connection for people with dementia.
- The Vicenza Farm Project uses a structured protocol combining cognitive stimulation and seasonal farm tasks.
- The program aligns with international literature on nature-based interventions for dementia.

## Abstract

Dementia is a major global health challenge, with wide-ranging psychosocial and relational impacts that call for supportive, everyday interventions alongside clinical care. While advances in Alzheimer’s disease are promising, dementia includes multiple conditions, including young-onset forms, and existing pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions still offer valuable but incomplete support, often leaving everyday psychosocial needs unmet for most people living with dementia. This Perspective describes the Vicenza Farm Project, a farm-based therapeutic horticulture program developed on social and educational farms of Northern Italy. The program offers weekly 3-h group sessions from March to October for around 8–10 participants, including people with young-onset dementia, facilitated by a multidisciplinary team of farmers, psychologists and trained volunteers. Activities follow a structured, replicable protocol that combines cognitive stimulation, seasonal gardening and farm tasks, shared breaks and closing reflection, with an emphasis on supported participation, personal agency and safe freedom. Drawing on qualitative and quantitative data from international literature on nature-based and care farming interventions, we outline how a farm-based therapeutic horticulture can help restore purpose, social connection and embodied identity while also animating rural spaces and reinforcing environmentally sensitive farming practices. We contrast the Italian policy framework of social agriculture, in which therapeutic horticulture is not yet recognized as a health intervention, with the more institutionalized Dutch model of green care farms, and we propose priorities for evaluation, integration into dementia pathways and long-term funding.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627), Alzheimer’s disease (MONDO:0004975)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Alzheimer's disease (MESH:D000544), Dementia (MESH:D003704)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13035757