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Research Thrive

Thrive: Green Care White Care

In November 2013 Thrive, the UK charity for horticultural therapy, held a seminar in London entitled ‘Green Care White Care: Gardening and Growing for Health’.

The seminar included seven presentations which can all be viewed and downloaded from the Thrive website where there is also a short video of Sir Richard Thompson’s keynote speech.

http://www.thrive.org.uk/green-care-white-care-presentations.aspx

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Information Thrive

Thrive e-Newsletter

Thrive, the charity for social and therapeutic horticulture in the UK, offer a free e-newletter. I would recommend signing up for anyone with an interest or wanting to learn more about horticultural therapy.

You can sign up here: http://www.thrive.org.uk/subscribe-to-thrive.aspx

You can also download previous issues here: http://www.thrive.org.uk/thrive-news.aspx

They also offer a specific e-newsletter on ‘Training and Education’ which focusses on sharing research, learning opportunities and practice tools for therapists. This is a relatively new addition and is worth examining further.

To find out more information and to sign up for this newsletter please visit: http://www.thrive.org.uk/training-and-education.aspx On this link you will also find out information about the conferences and seminars that Thrive run each year, such as the Green Care White Care which takes place on Monday the 18th of November in London.

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Thrive

Thrive’s Battersea Park Garden Open This Weekend

UK horticultural therapy charity Thrive is opening it’s Old English and Herb Garden to the public this weekend as part of London’s Open Squares Weekend.

Entry is free and the garden is open between 11-16:00.

More information can be found here: http://www.thrive.org.uk/battersea-london.aspx

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Information Thrive

Maggie’s Therapeutic Gardeners

Thrive have announced a partnership with Maggie’s Cancer Care Centres in the UK to recruit skilled horticultural therapists to maintain the therapeutic gardens and run sessions for people living with the impact of cancer.

The following locations are looking to appoint therapists: Edinburgh, Glasgow, Fife, Dundee, Inverness, Cheltenham, Nottingham and Swansea.

For more information and how to apply please follow this link:

http://www.thrive.org.uk/news/news/do-you-have-the-skills-to-become-one-of-maggies-therapeutic-gardeners-290.aspx

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Media Article Thrive

Research Champions Gardening for High Cholesterol

A piece that I discovered on the Thrive website about recently released research from Brazil and America which promotes the prescribing of gardening as an appropriate treatment for people with high cholesterol levels.

You can read the full article here: http://www.thrive.org.uk/news/news/news-288.aspx

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Professional Registration

ASTHP 1st Annual Conference

On Friday the 2nd of November I was fortunate to attend the 1st annual conference of the Association for Social and Therapeutic Horticulture Practitioners (ASTHP) in Pershore, Worcestershire.

I direct you to ASTHP’s website for further information about their short a long term aims regarding increasing the profile of social and therapeutic horticulture and the creation of a voluntary registration body. http://asthp.org.uk/aim-of-the-association/

The day was focussed on the creation a voluntary registration body for professionals practising social and therapeutic horticulture in England and Wales. It included presentations by Joe Sempik, Rachel Bragg, ASTHP Trustee Jon Fieldhouse and ASTHP Vice-Chair John Cliff.

I thought logically it would make sense to give a brief breakdown of what each of the speakers talked about.

Joe Sempik of Nottingham University – ‘Reflections on a Personal Journey Through a Decade of Change’.

Joe Sempik first came to ‘fame’ in the STH world after completed a research program on STH in 2002 entitled “Growing Together” – http://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/ccfr/growing_together/growingtogetherliteraturereview.htm

In his presentation to the ASTHP he focussed on how STH has changed over the last ten years since Growing Together was published. He demonstrated that a decade ago STH was relying on academic references from Benjamin Rush, Roger Ulrich’s studies on hospitals and green space In recent years the profession has moved on to specific well researched and tested studies are being carried out and STH is becoming a research discipline in its own right.

He also discussed that a recent PhD carried out by Anna A. Adevi entitled ‘Attachment to Certain Natural Environments: A Basis for Choice of Recreational Settings, Activities and Restoration from Stress?’ suggests that people develop an attachment with their natural environments at and early age in a similar way to the body they develop with their mother. This is important in relation to STH as it could mean that engaging children with the natural environment increases their potential for future green interventions, such as STH. http://www.ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/enrr/article/view/12243/9276

This continued quality of research and media exposure is what is required if STH is to influence Government Policy and commissioning services.

Before finishing Joe talked about the educational program around STH currently in practice in the UK. Thrive, in conjunction with the Occupational Therapy Department at Coventry University have now run the Diploma in STH for 17 years.

Rachel Bragg of the University of Essex – ‘Green Care in the Wider Context’.

Rachel’s presentation centred on how STH fits under the umbrella of ‘Green Care’ in the UK. Green Care encompasses therapies that use nature and the outdoor environment to treat and benefit people, such as Care Farming, Wilderness Therapy, Nature therapy and Ecotherapy.

Rachel discussed current and previous research that has been undertaken at the University of Essex and how this is influencing the development of green therapies in the UK.

I cannot do full justice to the work carried out by the University of Essex so I shall refer you to their excellent website which contains a wealth of information: http://www.greenexercise.org/index.html

Jon Fieldhouse of the University of West of England – ‘Know Your History, Shape Your Destiny’.

Jon focussed his presentation on the possibility of STH professional registration, discussing where, when and why the initial conversations about professional registration took place and the potential issues and benefits of creating a professional registering body for England and Wales.

It initial discussions took place between 1997-99 by Thrive’s Professional Development Steering Group. 15 years on we found ourselves at the first annual conference for ASTHP.

Jon highlighted a recent survey of the STH workforce which concluded that 92% want a national STH body, 92% want a register of practitioners, 90% want national ‘lobbying’ and 61% want a protected job title.

The presentation also highlighted the benefits and complications of a registration body demonstrating that is a delicate balance of: validation, not restrictive, quality assurance, regulation, inward/outward facing, representation, autonomy, accountability and being inclusive.

Jon concluded the presentation talking about where STH and health care currently is. That the medicalised notion of health is waning and people are starting to recognise the benefits of alternative treatments and that there are changing purchasing pattens (e.g. people having personalised budgets and choosing a treatment/intervention that works for them).

John Cliff, Growing People and Vice Chair of ASTHP – ‘First Steps to a Voluntary Professional Register’.

The day concluded with a presentation by John Cliff on the subject of the ASTHP creating a voluntary professional registration body for STH practitioners in England and Wales.

John recently attended the annual Canadian Horticultural Therapy Association conference in Vancouver and examined how their professional registration system works compared with that of their American counterparts whilst also examining the policies that the association has in place. John demonstrated the amount of work that has gone into understanding the dynamics of setting up and operating a professional registration body.

On completion of the presentation all those in attendance were asked to group together and complete a questionnaire regarding issues that a professional registering body may encounter and need to address. This obvious prompted some discussion on certain issues but you cannot please everyone all of the time, as someone more famous than me once said.

To Conclude

What is important is that as a profession it feels like we are on the cusp of the next phase of development in STH in the UK now working off a contemporary evidence base and looking realistically at a professional registering body.

ASTHP are currently looking for members (membership is £10 for a year) and people to help with the operation of the organisation, including running regional group meetings of practitioners.

More information about the ASTHP, how to help and how to become a member can be found here: http://asthp.org.uk/

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Thrive

Thrive – Using Gardening To Change Lives

I suppose the most logical place to start this blog and process is with Thrive.

Thrive are the leading horticultural therapy organisation in the UK. Since the charity was formed in 1978 they have been involved in promotion, delivery, education, funding and campaigning for the benefits of therapeutic horticulture across all ages and abilities.

In conjunction with Coventry University, Thrive run the main horticultural therapy qualification in the UK – The Professional Development Diploma in Social and Therapeutic Horticulture. This is a part-time distance learning course and the one I gained.

Their website is full of useful information which can increase your knowledge and practice. They also run a spin-off program and website called ‘carry on gardening’. It’s focus is to help people who have been involved in horticulture continue to do so after life changing events.

www.thrive.org.uk

www.carryongardening.org.uk