Occupational Therapy Utilizing Equine Movement (Hippotherapy)

What is Hippotherapy?

Hippotherapy is an evidence based treatment tool utilized by Occupational Therapists, Physical Therapists and Speech Language Pathologists. The therapist manipulates equine movement to engage sensory, motor and cognitive systems. Hippotherapy as a treatment tool should be utilized in combination with other treatment tools and strategies in the patient’s plan of care. Many systems are influenced with the use of equine movement as a treatment tool. Some of these systems include: motor, musculoskeletal, nervous/limbic, respiratory, circulatory, sensory processing, cognition, and speech and language


Why Horses?

The Rhythmic Nature of Equine Movement

The horse’s movement provides sensory motor experiences that are precise, rhythmic and repetitive. All of which are necessary for most human behavior

Dynamic Systems Theory

Equine movement impacts many different systems in the body. Any system can influence the other systems in the body. This impact on multiple systems promotes organization and improves the potential for learning.

Motor Learning Theory

The horse’s movement provides a repetitive, predictable, and symmetrical dynamic surface on which the patient can develop and practice functional postural control and balance. The horse averages 2500-3000 steps per 30 minute treatment resulting in approximately 100 inputs per minute. Sustained repetitive movement means more opportunity for practice.

Sensory Integration Frame of Reference 

Horses provide the client with sensory rich experience. Therapists manipulate equine movement and pick a specific equine partner for a patient based on sensory properties such as the proprioceptive, vestibular and kinesthetic input that their movement provides. The sensory integration frame of reference examines the interaction between sensory systems and provides information that plays a large part in a child’s learning and behaviors. This frame of reference focuses on a child’s ability to make adaptive responses to constantly changing sensory environments. Working with the equine and in the outdoor environment allows us to target sensory integrative skills through use of connection with equine and the constantly changing outdoor environment. This includes targeting sensory modulation, sensory discrimination, postural-ocular control, praxis, bi-lateral integration and planning.


Skills Addressed in Occupational Therapy Session Utilizing Equine Movement and Equine Assisted Learning

Sensory Processing

Therapists can provide opportunities for enhanced or dampened sensory input, allowing opportunities for the patient to plan, organize, and actively carry out adaptive behaviors. Equine movement provides highly organized sensory input into vestibular, proprioceptive, tactile, and visual systems simultaneously in the context of a meaningful, enjoyable activity. The sensory input may be modified and/or graded to meet the needs of the patient. The sensory input is consistent and ongoing.

Equine movement offers a controlled method of progressively challenging the patient’s sensory systems, with enhancements possible through careful manipulation of the horse’s gait, tempo, degree of impulsion, transitions, and pairing of equine gait with alternative positioning and/or equipment modifications. The horse provides multi-dimensional movement through space, providing opportunities to experience visual flow and vestibular input within a functional context.

For most patients, the experience of the horse’s movement is a novel one, allowing for development of movement strategies outside of their habitual patterns and moving beyond their wells of stability/compensatory strategies. The natural variability of the equine environment is functional and promotes active problem solving. This variability can be minimized or maximized by the therapist.

The horse’s movement provides multi-modal sensorimotor experiences that are precise, rhythmic, and repetitive, all of which are necessary for most human behavior. These movement characteristics can be graded by the therapist based on the needs of the patient.

• Targets vestibular, proprioceptive, and visual input overlaid on a functional task

• Targets core control with low amplitude pelvic and spinal mobility

The horse has an organized nervous system that allows the patient to experience organized multidimensional movement and multi-sensory input. As such, an organized system (the equine movement) ‘lends itself’ to a disordered system.

Motor Skills

The dynamic movement of the horse aids in improving motor skills by improving strength, body awareness, reaction time, rhythm, bi-lateral coordination, visual motor integration and balance. The rhythmic bi-lateral stimulation from the horse stimulates the corpus callosum and cerebellum- parts of the brain that are responsible for integrating the two sides of the body, the part of the brain that controls movement, balance and posture. The basis for many motor skills is postural control, an area that is targeted during occupational therapy sessions utilizing equine movement. Motor planning is another area that is very important for motor skills- the rhythmic input from the horse helps to improve motor planning through providing a framework for rhythm and timing.

Life Skills and Executive Functioning

Conducting therapy on the farm offers a unique environment that offers a variety of opportunities for patients. Patients gain life skills through caring for/mimicking daily living tasks in the equine environment.

Social Emotional Skills

Social emotional skills are challenged through interaction and communication within the team. The team includes our equine partners, 1 leader and sometimes a side-walker, and the therapist. We utilize social emotional tools like books, games and horse care activities to treat social-emotional skills.

2025-2026 Schedule

Occupational therapy sessions utilizing equine movement are typically run in groups of either 8-9 or 15-16 sessions based on the four seasons. For new patients this includes a 1 hour video consultation prior to initial evaluation at the farm. For returning patients this includes a 1 hour video or clinic based progress consultation after one season begins and before the next begins. 

Summer Semester 2025 (7 weeks): June 22nd-June 28th Intake/progress check-in week (virtual or clinic based) June 29th-August 7th (equine sessions)

Fall Semester 2025 (16 weeks): August 24th- December 20th 2025 Break week: November 23rd-29th for Thanksgiving

Winter Semester 2026 (8 weeks): January 4th- January 10th 2026 Intake/progress check-in week (virtual or clinic based) January 11th- February 28th 2026 (equine sessions)

Spring Semester 2026 (16 weeks): March 1st- March 8th 2026 Intake/progress check-in week (virtual or clinic based) March 9th- June 20th 2026 (equine sessions)

Summer Semester 2026 (8 weeks): June 29th-July 4th 2026 Intake/progress check-in week (virtual or clinic based) July 5th-August 22nd 2026 (equine sessions)

Fall Semester 2026 (15 weeks) August 30th- September 5th 2026 Intake/progress check-in week (virtual or clinic based) December 19th 2026 (equine sessions) Break week: November 22nd-28th Thanksgiving

Pricing

Pricing

Payment is expected before the time initial evaluation. Sessions are typically paid as a lump sum for each season.

Initial Evaluation: $400 includes 1 hour video intake with parent to discuss goals

Treatment Sessions: $200 an hour 

Consultations: 1 hour video progress consultations and clinic based progress checks are $200 and will be billed along with group of sessions