Thursday, January 27, 2011

E-Therapy in 2011

This is very interesting because E-Therapy ( Online Therapy ) has been going on for years and years, but like the article says, " little has changed..." I think the reason why E-Therapy will never beat face-to-face therapy is because its not as personal. People want to feel a personal security with their therapist and the online world has gotten loads of unsecured vibes. Another good point is that people want to actually step away from normal routine and life to go take time to meet with a therapy and do horse therapy. Heres the view from an E-Therapist...

"Colleagues, acquaintances, e-patients, media and others often ask me, “What’s the state of online therapy? Does it have a future?” My answer hasn’t changed significantly in the past decade, for good reason — very little has changed in the field.

For folks who may be unawares, I’ve been a part of the mental health landscape and online therapy since the early 1990s, and e-therapy specifically when it started to hit the scene hard in the late 1990s. In fact, I coined the term “e-therapy” to describe online psychotherapy — a specific modality of psychotherapy that utilizes many techniques and features of traditional face-to-face psychotherapy. In 1999, I joined an e-therapy startup — HelpHorizons.com — as the industry’s youngest COO and led that company to a successful acquisition years later.

There’s no dearth of professionals willing to give e-therapy a try. In fact, when we ran HelpHorizons in the early 2000s, we had over 1,000 professionals at one point who signed up for the service.

What we lacked were people who actually utilized or wanted to utilize the service. And that’s the key problem with online psychotherapy: It’s a great modality that few consumers actually want to use.

Over the years, I’ve talked with dozens of people who’ve tried out e-therapy. I always ask them the same question, “Why did you stop?” Two factors have emerged — cost and face-to-face is more authentic a therapy experience.

So all that leaves is paying for a real therapy interaction.

“If I have to schedule my online session just as I schedule a face-to-face session with a real-life therapist, I might as well see the real-life therapist,” is what I often hear. Which is what the vast majority of folks do when confronted with the actual costs and inconvenience of real-time, synchronous online therapy. Add to that that most insurance companies still do not cover the cost of online sessions, then it’s a no brainer. Face-to-face, traditional psychotherapy is often less expensive and more emotionally fulfilling than a comparable online therapy session."

Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2011/01/08/the-state-of-e-therapy-2011/

Pegasus is an organization that brings recovery through Horse Therapy and Equine Courses to help people achieve an addiction cure! Visit PegasusEct.com for more information! :) 

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Monday, January 17, 2011

Students can now learn about Equine Careers

For now this type of event isn't very widespread around the United States, but more and more of these opportunities should arise in the near future! Horse therapy is something Pegasus is extremely passionate about and the more students and people that can learn about it and its impact...the better!

"The Kentucky Horse Council (KHC) will once again offer Kentucky students the opportunity to learn about careers in the equine and related industries at the "Your Future in Agriculture & Horses" event. The bulk of the event provides an opportunity for students to meet with representatives from programs participating in the Agricultural Trade Show, which is part of the KHC Annual Conference scheduled to take place Jan. 13-14 at the Lexington Convention Center.

"Your Future in Horses & Agriculture" provides post-secondary and equine and agricultural certificate programs the opportunity to connect with those interested in pursuing a career in the equine and agricultural fields. Representatives from a range of educational institutions from across the Commonwealth of Kentucky will be available to interact with interested students.

"Pick a School, Get a Job," a special equine college panel, is slated for 2:00 p.m. on Jan. 14. The panel includes successful graduates from a variety of Kentucky equine programs who will share insight into the unique offerings of their schools and how their undergraduate experience prepared them for work in the equine industry." This panel should also open many opportunities for equine jobs.

"Developing the next generation of agricultural leaders and equine professionals is an important aspect of the Kentucky Horse Council's mission," noted Anna Zinkhon, KHC Board President.

Participating educational programs include: Equine Industry Program at the University of Louisville, Georgetown College Equine Scholars Program, Kentucky Equine Higher Education Consortium, Kentucky Horse Park, Morehead State University, United States Equestrian Federation, the University of Kentucky, and the University of Kentucky Ag Economics.

For more information about the event or to pre-register visit www.kentuckyhorse.org."

~~~~~

Pegasus is an organization that brings recovery through Horse Therapy and Equine Courses to help people achieve an addiction cure! Visit PegasusEct.com for more information! :) 

 

Please support us by "Liking" our page at...Horse Therapy

 

 

Thursday, January 13, 2011

7 Things to Obliterate Worry!

 Worry is something nearly all of us deal with. It can ruin a day, make simple things seem impossible, and add that unwanted stress!! During our horse therapy sessions stress seems to be something very distant, but here are some things you can do anytime to help get rid of Worry :) 

  1. Ask yourself right now if you can do something about it
  2. Block out “worry time."
  3. Realize that worrying is a choice and do something better with your time
  4. Flood a piece of paper with your worries.
  5. Identify the deeper threats behind your worries and instead work on those
  6. Feel your feelings.
  7. Participate in physical activity
  8. Practice regular self-care.
  9. See a therapist.


Source: http://psychcentral.com

Pegasus is an organization that brings recovery through Horse Therapy and Equine Courses to help people achieve an addiction cure! Visit PegasusEct.com for more information! :) 

 

Please support us by "Liking" our page at...Horse Therapy

 


 

Friday, January 7, 2011

Facebook for Therapists and Doctors

There has been some articles surfacing about Doctors and Therapists becoming "friends" with patients on Facebook and in our case Horse Therapy. I find this extremely interesting as the outcomes can be very good or very weird in most cases, from surveys. Here is a small article written on this topic of Facebook friending in a "professional" enviorment...

http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2010/12/16/what-are-doctors-doing-on-fa...

What are your thoughts on this very close relationship? Should it only be maintained while you are physically present with the patient? Or always? 

In my opinion, Doctors and Therapists should not "friend" patients on Facebook unless they fully understand the information and inner circle they are letting them in on. As an alternative, they should make a Facebook "Page", like the Pegasus one, and stay in contact with them there! 

Pegasus is an organization that brings recovery through Horse Therapy andEquine Courses to help people achieve an addiction cure! Visit PegasusEct.com for more information! :) 

 

Please support us by "Liking" our page at...Horse Therapy

 

 

 

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Stop Killing Us!

 This is a great billboard campaign to support! Many people outside of the equine community have no idea what is going on with horses being used for meat! Please also support our Horse Therapy page :)... 

"A Pennsylvania-based equine rescue organization hopes a billboard advertising campaign will raise awareness of horse slaughter issues, particularly among non-horse owners.

Angel Acres Horse Haven Rescue in Glenville launched the campaign this week by placing billboards depicting two horses and the message "Stop Killing Us" in two Baltimore, Md., locations. The campaign's companion website,www.stopslaughteringus.com, contains information about horse slaughter issues, and encourages visitors to urge their legislators to oppose local horse processing plant development and to pass federal anti-slaughter legislation.

A court decision halted horse processing in the United States in 2007. Processing plants in Mexico and Canada have since become destinations for slaughter-bound horses from the U.S. Legislation (HR 503/S727 The Prevention of Equine Cruelty Act) remains pending that would prohibit the transport, sale, delivery, or export of horses for slaughter for human consumption. It also criminalizes the purchase, sale, delivery, or export of horse meat intended for human consumption. Meanwhile, in 2009, legislation allowing private sector horse processing plant development was introduced in some states with mixed results. Plant development legislation became law in Montana and Wyoming in 2009. No processing plants have yet opened in those states.

Angel Acres founder and director Jo Deibel said general public support is key to moving anti-slaughter legislation forward.

"Our mission is to educate the non-horse owning public about the risk our American horses face," Deibel said. "Only when our country's horse and animal lovers loudly raise their voices in concert will our legislators finally pass bills that languished in governmental committee for years."

Equine welfare advocate Richard Cuoto agrees that many people outside the equine community are largely unaware that horses are still processed for meat.

"Almost all Americans, and also our political leaders, have not a clue of the slaughter issue and the process of getting horses into Mexico and Canada," Cuoto said. "The billboards would have an effect with the proper picture and phrase implemented."

Deibel's aim is to erect several billboards bearing the anti-slaughter message in high profile locations throughout the U.S. and is seeking donations to help defray the $300 cost of each advertisement.

Wyoming Representative Sue Wallis, sponsor of legislation allowing horse processing plant development in that state believes contributor funds could be better spent."

 

Source: http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=17465&source=rss

 

Pegasus is an organization that brings recovery through Horse Therapy andEquine Courses to help people achieve an addiction cure! Visit PegasusEct.com for more information! :) 

 

Please support us by "Liking" our page at...Horse Therapy