Athelda with her horse as a young girl
I know from my own personal experience, as a former caregiver for my mother, Athelda, who had Alzheimer’s Disease, how stressful supporting someone with memory loss can be. This is especially true for those who are caring for their loved one at home. The Memory Care Corral program, developed in partnership with community organizations with expertise in eldercare and dementia, as well as therapeutic horsemanship professionals, is an innovative program based on research that has shown interaction with horses is beneficial for both the individual with memory loss and the caregiver. Guided sessions with horses have been shown to reduce stress, improve communication and enhance the quality of life for both participants. Individuals do not need to have had any experience with horses to benefit from this ground-based program. I have found this program to be a perfect tribute to my mother, whose charitable fund, the Athelda Fund, provides the resources to make this program possible.
Sandra H. Martin
The Athelda Fund
Background and Research
More than 410,000 New Yorkers over age 65 are living with Alzheimer's disease and that number is expected to increase by over 12% by 2025. In addition, 563,000 family caregivers bear the burden of the disease in New York, providing 835 million hours of unpaid care. The prevalence of dementia, as well as the impact on families, is substantial. Therefore, supporting those living with memory loss and their caregivers is critical to enhance the quality of life for all involved.
The Memory Care Corral was developed to help address this important public health challenge by providing an effective approach to supporting individuals with memory loss and their caregivers. The program was developed out of the knowledge gained from the research and experience of other therapeutic equine programs addressing this problem around the country.
The Connected Horse Program, an evidence-based program in California, has shown that equine guided workshops improve the quality of life (e.g., improved sleep, reduced feelings of burden and depression) for both the individual with dementia and their caregiver. Silver Saddles was an innovative riding and horsemanship program, based in Williamsburg, Virginia, for residents of assisted living communities confronting memory loss. This program was inspired in part by a study at Ohio State University (OSU) that found spending time with horses worked to ease symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.
Memory Care Corral is the next phase in this line of equine assisted programming made available to dyads (family caregivers and persons living with dementia). This innovative program has been developed by a partnership of community agencies with expertise in dementia and aging services, as well as therapeutic horsemanship professionals. The funding for the program is being contributed by the Athelda Fund, a family fund dedicated to enabling individuals living with dementia to remain at home and engaged in their community for as long as possible.
Program Design
The Memory Care Corral program is designed to offer weekly equine assisted activities for caregivers and their loved ones living with dementia and related conditions. Each activity session lasts 1.5 hours. Activities focus on providing both members of the dyad an opportunity to connect with the horses in a ground-based format. Activities may include grooming, leading, artwork with the horses, education about the different types of horses, and gentle chair-based exercises.
The goal of the equine sessions is to facilitate a therapeutic environment addressing important goals for the family caregiver such as promoting self-compassion and self-care, building a support network, and finding balance between care, personal and professional commitments. The sessions also nurture a supportive social group for caregivers to encourage each other, support one another, and share strategies and resources. Further, the sessions engage the person living with dementia by creating a welcoming, safe and engaging environment with opportunities to participate in activities with and without their caregiver.
Best practices in both elder care and in dementia care recommend identifying and applying non-pharmacological interventions to use in addressing behavioral and psychological symptoms. There are various psychosocial strategies that may help reduce the potential negative impacts of anxiety, isolation, embarrassment, depression and dementia. The Memory Care Corral is one such program and, combined with preliminary findings of the positive impact of the human-horse connection, may further the evidence that supports the psychosocial intervention of equine assisted activities.