The purpose of this research is for the multi-disciplinary team at an inpatient psychiatric hospital to investigate more innovative ways to engage service users in order to promote wellbeing and emotional regulation. In particular, there is a focus on engaging patients who do not routinely engage with the Psychology Team. As such, we are aiming to explore the effectiveness of Equine Assisted Psychotherapy (EAP) with the service users on a specialist Personality Disorder ward. EAP is the deliberate inclusion of an equine (e.g. horse, alpaca) amongst a therapy team to improve patient outcomes. This therapy team includes a mental health professional and certified equine specialist, along with equine(s) and client(s). EAP can offer specific psychotherapeutic treatment goals such as addressing trauma and emotion dysregulation. The presence of an equine removes the need for verbal communication, which allows for non-verbal approaches that support self-development; identifying and discussing the feelings, emotions and behaviours generated through interaction with the horse. The presence of equine also provides a unique opportunity for traumatised individuals to build trust with other sentient beings that value connection, safety, and trust. These specific psychotherapeutic treatment goals are especially relevant for those with a diagnosis of Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder (EUPD). Service users with EUPD present with complex mental health difficulties, often with problems with emotional regulation, attachment, and self-harm. This research will use a qualitative, single arm design in which all participants (inpatients who have received an Emotionally Unstable personality Disorder diagnosis) engage in a novel psychotherapeutic intervention (6 sessions of Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy). Their experiences of this psychotherapeutic intervention will be explored using semi-structured interviews. Researchers and participants will collaborate in using Thematic Analysis to analyse the content of these interviews.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
All participants will attend 6 half-day sessions of Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy. This is psychotherapy between the professional(s) and the client(s) which takes place in the presence of an equine (e.g. horse, alpaca). This will be conducted at a specialist clinic by a member of their facilitator team. There will also be hospital staff on-hand to provide support if needed, but hospital staff will not be involved in the therapy directly. The therapy will involve a group session (1 hour and 15 minutes long), and individual sessions (30 minutes per participant).
Cygnet Hospital Kewstoke
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, United Kingdom
Perception of Emotional Regulation
This will be measured via semi structured interview questions and the thematic analysis of participants' responses. It will focus on whether participants notice a difference in how they are able to regulate their emotions following therapeutic intervention and, if so, what that change is and why participants think that change has happened.
Time frame: From enrolment to 1 week after end of last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. This should be a maximum of 8 weeks in total.
Perception of Connection to Others
This will be measured via semi structured interview questions and the thematic analysis of participants' responses. It will focus on whether participants notice a difference in how they are able to connect with others following therapeutic intervention and, if so, what that change is and what they think caused it.
Time frame: From enrolment to 1 week after end of last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. This should be a maximum of 8 weeks in total.
General Experience of Therapeutic Intervention
This will be measured via semi structured interview questions and the thematic analysis of participants' responses. It will focus on how the participants felt about the therapy e.g. what they liked/disliked about it and which aspects were meaningful to them.
Time frame: From first therapy session to one week after the last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. Up to 7 weeks in total.
Perception of how Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy compares to other therapies.
This will be measured via semi structured interview questions and the thematic analysis of participants' responses. It will focus on how the participants felt this therapy compared to other therapies they have experience e.g. In what ways is it better/worse?
Time frame: From first therapy session to one week after the last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. Up to 7 weeks in total.
Intervention Retention Rate
The number of participants that withdraw from the intervention.
Time frame: From start of first Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session to end of last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. The Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy runs for 6 weeks in total.
Intervention Attendance
The number of Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy sessions each participant attends.
Time frame: From start of first Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session to end of last Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy session. These run for 6 weeks in total.
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