Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates

Dransmann M, Koddebusch M, Wicker P, Gröben D, Gröben B (2026)
Healthcare 14(10): 1418.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 1.09 MB
Abstract / Bemerkung

Background: Equine-assisted programs have been shown to promote psychosocial outcomes, but quantitative evidence of motor benefits in correctional settings is scarce. Aim: The present study examined the effects of a one-week equine-assisted riding program on riding performance, movement quality, and well-being among young inmates in an open German prison. Methods: Ten male participants (24.5 ± 0.71 years) completed a five-day program combining practical riding exercises, cooperative activities, and guided reflection. Riding performance was assessed using standardized expert video ratings based on the German performance testing guidelines on a 10-point scale, movement quality using a semantic differential with bipolar adjective pairs assessing telic and autotelic dimensions on a six-point scale, and well-being using the WHO-5 Well-Being Index. A single-group pre–post repeated-measures design without a control group was applied. Results: Significant improvements were found in riding performance for both walk and trot, with large effect sizes (n = 10). Participants also reported a significant enhancement in the autotelic, experience-oriented dimension of movement quality, whereas no significant change occurred in the telic, goal-oriented dimension. Well-being increased significantly from pre- to post-test. Conclusions: Even a short, experience-focused equine-assisted program can produce meaningful improvements in motor performance, positive movement experience, and well-being in a correctional context. Equine-assisted programs may therefore represent a promising complementary approach to rehabilitation by integrating physical, emotional, and social learning processes.

Stichworte
prison; youth detention; horse-riding; rehabilitation; sports; welfare; autotelic; telic; intervention; motor learning
Erscheinungsjahr
2026
Zeitschriftentitel
Healthcare
Band
14
Ausgabe
10
Seite(n)
1418
eISSN
2227-9032
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/3016832

Zitieren

Dransmann M, Koddebusch M, Wicker P, Gröben D, Gröben B. Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates. Healthcare. 2026;14(10):1418.
Dransmann, M., Koddebusch, M., Wicker, P., Gröben, D., & Gröben, B. (2026). Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates. Healthcare, 14(10), 1418. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14101418
Dransmann, Milan, Koddebusch, Martin, Wicker, Pamela, Gröben, Daniela, and Gröben, Bernd. 2026. “Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates”. Healthcare 14 (10): 1418.
Dransmann, M., Koddebusch, M., Wicker, P., Gröben, D., and Gröben, B. (2026). Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates. Healthcare 14, 1418.
Dransmann, M., et al., 2026. Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates. Healthcare, 14(10), p 1418.
M. Dransmann, et al., “Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates”, Healthcare, vol. 14, 2026, pp. 1418.
Dransmann, M., Koddebusch, M., Wicker, P., Gröben, D., Gröben, B.: Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates. Healthcare. 14, 1418 (2026).
Dransmann, Milan, Koddebusch, Martin, Wicker, Pamela, Gröben, Daniela, and Gröben, Bernd. “Effects of an Equine-Assisted Riding Program on Motor Performance, Movement Quality, and Well-Being among Young Inmates”. Healthcare 14.10 (2026): 1418.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2026-05-21T12:25:13Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
47252356b29b47cb283d1cc296225933


Zitationen in Europe PMC

Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.

References

Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.

Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 42194509
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar