Hippotherapy 

KidTherapy has established a partnership with Freedom Horse, Inc. in order to provide the additional service of Hippotherapy.

Freedom Horse is a Non-Profit 501(c)(3) organization. It was formed to offer the services of equines as partners in therapy. Equine Assisted Activities at Freedom Horse are available to those who have disabilities as well as the able bodied who would like to benefit from a working partnership with a horse. Senior and Veterans are also welcome to take classes. Freedom Horse holds a Center Membership from NARHA (North American Riding For the Handicapped Association). They adhere to the NARHA standards for teaching.

Our Spring sessions will be offered on Monday's and Saturday's.
The Hippotherapy Session will be 1/2 hour long and a fee of $100.00 will be charged.

Monday session to start April 21st and run for 8 weeks.
Saturday sessions to start April 19th and run for 8 weeks.

Sessions are limited.

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Hippotherapy as a Treatment Tool
from the American Hippotherapy Association

Hippotherapy is a physical, occupational, and speech-language therapy treatment tool that utilizes equine movement as part of an integrated intervention program to achieve functional outcomes.

Equine movement provides multidimensional movement, which is variable, rhythmic and repetitive. The horse provides a dynamic base of support, making it an excellent tool for increasing trunk strength and control, balance, building overall postural strength and endurance, addressing weight bearing, and. motor planning. Equine movement offers well-modulated sensory input to vestibular, proprioceptive, tactile and visual channels. During gait transitions, the patient must perform subtle adjustments in the trunk to maintain a stable position. When a patient is sitting forward astride the horse, the horse's walking gait imparts movement responses remarkably similar to normal human gait. The effects of equine movement on postural control, sensory systems, and motor planning can be used to facilitate coordination and timing, grading of responses, respiratory control, sensory integration skills and attentional skills. Equine movement can be used to facilitate the neurophysiologic systems that support all of our functional daily living skills.

Physical Therapists:
The physical therapist can overlay a variety of motor tasks on the horse's movement to address the motor needs of each patient and to promote functional outcomes in skill areas related to gross motor ability such as sitting, standing, and walking.

Occupational Therapists:
The occupational therapist is able to combine the effects of the equine movement with other standard intervention strategies for working on fine motor control, sensory integration, feeding skills, attentional skills, and functional daily living skills in a progressively challenging manner.

Speech-Language Pathologists:
The speech-language pathologist is able to use equine movement to facilitate the physiologic systems that support speech and language. When combined with other standard speech-language intervention strategies, the speech-language pathologist is able generate effective remediation of communication disorders and promote functional communication outcomes.

Population:
Children and adults with mild to severe neuromusculoskeletal dysfunction

Who Can Benefit From Hippotherapy?

 Medical Conditions

 Impairments

 Autism Spectrum Disorder  Abnormal muscle tone
 Cerebral Palsy  Impaired balance responses
 Developmental Delay  Impaired coordination
 Genetric Syndromes  Impaired communication
 Learning Disabilities  Impaired sensorimotor function
 Sensory Integration Disorders  Postural assymetry
 Speech-Language Disorders  Poor postural control
 Traumatic Brain Injury/Stroke  Decreased mobility
  Limbic systemic dysfunction related
    to arousal and attentional skills

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Our Therapist

Sara Gruenwald Goodstone
Doctor of Physical Therapy

Sara received her Doctorate in Physical Therapy from Columbia University in 2003. She has worked for the Kessler Institute of Rehabilitation treating adolescents and adults with traumatic brain injuries, strokes and MS.

She is an AHA Level I therapist with more than 15 years of experience with horses. Sara is working towards her AHA Level II therapist designation.

Sara enjoys spending time with her horse Sonny as much a possible.

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95 West Main Street
Chester, NJ 07930
908.879.7067

1931 Washington Valley Rd
Martinsville, NJ 08836
732.868.0101

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