Veterans in substance abuse treatment program self-initiate box gardening as a stress reducing therapeutic modality

•Veterans attending a 28-day inpatient substance abuse treatment program self-initiated box gardening to reduce stress.•The inpatient veteran diagnoses included alcohol abuse, drug abuse, PTSD, depression, anxiety and military sexual trauma.•Veterans utilized their own resources in order to have hor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Complementary therapies in medicine 2018-02, Vol.36, p.50-53
Hauptverfasser: Lehmann, Lauren P., Detweiler, Jonna G., Detweiler, Mark B.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Veterans attending a 28-day inpatient substance abuse treatment program self-initiated box gardening to reduce stress.•The inpatient veteran diagnoses included alcohol abuse, drug abuse, PTSD, depression, anxiety and military sexual trauma.•Veterans utilized their own resources in order to have horticultural therapy for reducing internal and environmental stressors.•The veteran initiated horticulture therapy has continued for 3 successive years without Veterans Affairs assistance.•The veterans’ activities in the gardens and their responses to their gardening activities are described. To assess the experiences of a veteran initiated horticultural therapy garden during their 28-day inpatient Substance Abuse Residential Rehabilitation Treatment Program (SARRTP). Retrospective study. Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC), Salem, Virginia, USA Group interviews with veterans from the last SARRTP classes and individual interviews with VAMC greenhouse staff in summer of 2016. Time spent in garden, frequency of garden visits, types of passive and active garden activities, words describing the veterans’ emotional reactions to utilizing the garden. In 3 summer months of 2016, 50 percent of the 56 veterans interviewed visited and interacted with the gardens during their free time. Frequency of visits generally varied from 3 times weekly to 1–2 times a day. Amount of time in the garden varied from 10min to 2h. The veterans engaged in active and/or passive gardening activities during their garden visits. The veterans reported feeling “calm”, “serene”, and “refreshed” during garden visitation and after leaving the garden. Although data was secured only at the end of the 2016 growing season, interviews of the inpatient veterans revealed that they used their own initiative and resources to continue the horticulture therapy program for 2 successive growing years after the original pilot project ended in 2014. These non-interventionist, therapeutic garden projects suggest the role of autonomy and patient initiative in recovery programs for veterans attending VAMC treatment programs and they also suggest the value of horticulture therapy as a meaningful evidence- based therapeutic modality for veterans.
ISSN:0965-2299
1873-6963
DOI:10.1016/j.ctim.2017.10.013