1st Edition

How Change Happens in Equine-Assisted Interventions A Theory of Horses, Humans, and Psychotherapy

208 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

208 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

208 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

How Change Happens in Equine-Assisted Interventions gives clinicians and researchers an intervention theory on the mechanisms of change during psychotherapy and other interventions that incorporate horses. Chapters introduce the concept of intervention theory, present a theory of the problem (what the client comes with), theories explaining the intervention (what is done during a session), and... Read more

Section 1: Why Theory for Equine-Assisted Intervention?  1. Why Theory?  2. What is Equine-Assisted Intervention?  3. The Horse  Section 2: Equine-Assisted Story Transformation (EAST)  4. Introduction to EAST  5. Theory of the Problem  6. Theory of the Intervention  7. Theory of Change  8. Integrating the Theories: EAST  Section 3: Application  9. Seeking the Client’s Perspective  10. It’s A Problem: Autoethnography 1  11. Finding Strong: Autoethnography 2  12. Analysis and Interpretation  13. Bringing it All Together

Biography

Noreen W. Esposito, EdD, PMHNP, FAANP, is an Associate Professor Emerita at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a Nurse Psychotherapist, and the Founder of Knowing Horse.

Angela K. Fournier, PhD, LP, is a Professor in the Department of Psychology at Bemidji State University, a licensed Psychologist, and the Director of the Humanimal Interaction Laboratory.

 

 

"Esposito and Fournier do a beautiful job of elucidating the lived experiences of equine-assisted therapists and educators while masterfully pulling from disparate theories. Their intervention theory is a groundbreaking step toward increasing understanding of horse/human interaction made accessible to researchers and practitioners alike." Deborah Eaker-Rich, PhD, clinical full professor (retired), School of Education, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

"EAST is the brilliant and creative syncretism of mind-body science, humanistic psychology, and leading-edge learning theories that provides the first formal framework for understanding the transformative, numinous quality of the horse-human encounter in equine-assisted therapies." Beverley Kane, MD, assistant professor of medicine, Stanford University and founder of Equine-imity Somatic Horsemanship

"This book provides important thought processes to consider and evaluate when incorporating horses into psychotherapy and other interventions. I highly recommend this book and appreciate the authors adding an important analysis and contribution in the world of equine-assisted services." Lynn Thomas, LCSW, founder/CEO of Arenas for Change (ARCH), board president of Horses for Mental Health, and founder/former CEO of Eagala