Chattanooga Times Free Press

Parkridge using recreation as form of therapy

Parkridge Valley treating young clients outside

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER

Adventure education facilitato­r David Hoover hiked up the trail that leads to the overlook at Parkridge Valley’s Child and Adolescent campus.

Most people get winded on the trek, but he said the view of Chattanoog­a is worth it, especially for the young clients with emotional and behavioral health problems who come to the campus for therapy.

“It helps put things into perspectiv­e,” Hoover said as he pointed to buildings below, including a high school that appeared much smaller from the vantage point.

Mindy Brown, a certified recreation therapist at the campus, talks about perspectiv­e a lot during therapy, Hoover said, and looking down at Chattanoog­a helps patients relate to that concept, because “their world gets bigger.”

Providers at the 80-acre Parkridge Valley Child and Adolescent campus — which serves the inpatient psychiatri­c needs of children under age 18 — use evidence-based recreation therapy to complement the more traditiona­l mental health counseling sessions known as cognitive behavioral therapy.

Brown said recreation therapy takes the principles learned in cognitive behavioral therapy and gives patients an opportunit­y to experience them in real-life situations. When appropriat­e, they incorporat­e outdoor activities, such as hiking, disc golf, rock climbing, swimming and a ropes course.

“We learn through experience,” Brown said. “It’s hard to tell people how to feel better. It’s easier to show them and explain why it worked.”

The newest addition to campus is a bouldering wall inside the gym. Research from the University of Arizona in 2018 found the social, mental and physical endurance of bouldering — a form of rock climbing — could be successful psychother­apy for treating depression.

“There are different routes for your physical activity level, and there’s a social aspect along with the feeling of an immediate accomplish­ment when bouldering,” researcher Eva-Maria Stelzer said in a news release from the university. “You have to be mindful and focused on the moment. It does not leave much room to let your mind wonder on things that may be going on in your life — you have to focus on not falling.”

Brown wants to dispel the misconcept­ion that her job is “just playing with the kids” and for more people to know about the benefits of recreation therapy.

“Everything is goal directed,” she said. “When they come here, each of the kids has a variety of treatment issues that they’re working on. I work with the treatment team as well as the child to establish their goals, and then we use the activity interventi­ons in order to address those goals.”

Recreation therapy can be used in children

“You’re going back to where you came from, but you’re going back with some new tools and new habits.”

— DAVID HOOVER, ADVENTURE EDUCATION FACILITATO­R AT PARKVIEW VALLEY CHILD AND ADOLESCENT CAMPUS

and adults to treat mental health conditions, such as depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and eating disorders. However, anyone can benefit from therapy.

“We service all behavioral health needs, and we have a lot of kids who have come here with trauma,” Brown said. “Sometimes, people are just going through a tough time and they need to learn those mood management pieces … we’re looking at the whole person — their mental health, their emotional health — and those things are very closely aligned.”

The programs use sequencing to teach skills, such as regulating emotions, spending free time in healthy ways and problem solving in a safe environmen­t. As patients begin to grasp new, more healthy behavior patterns, Brown said kids who are able to manage in recreation therapy groups are also appropriat­e for the adventureb­ased programmin­g Hoover facilitate­s.

For example, people who think they can’t ride a bike start with a desk cycle before moving to stationary bikes, which are arranged like spin class at a gym. At the campus bike shop, Hoover teaches clients to ride, care for and repair bicycles. Not only do the bikes help kids learn responsibi­lity and self reliance, they can be an economical mode of transporta­tion when patients return home.

“We have a microcosm here that represents the world outside,” he said. “You’re going back to where you came from, but you’re going back with some new tools and new habits.”

Every program and activity is strategica­lly designed to emulate the community’s expectatio­ns, down to the hand-drawn maps Hoover made to teach kids to navigate the hiking trails. The goal is to prepare patients when they are discharged to spend time in a healthy way without relapsing, Brown said.

“We have them practice so they gain that confidence and self efficacy so they can do it outside of here,” she said. “Our overall goal is to launch these patients back into the community with a new skill set and without the stigma of mental health associated with that.”

Contact Elizabeth Fite at efite@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6673.

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY ELIZABETH FITE ?? David Hoover, an adventure education facilitato­r at Parkridge Valley’s Child and Adolescent campus, talks about how cycling and other recreation­al activities can help behavioral health patients.
STAFF PHOTOS BY ELIZABETH FITE David Hoover, an adventure education facilitato­r at Parkridge Valley’s Child and Adolescent campus, talks about how cycling and other recreation­al activities can help behavioral health patients.
 ??  ?? The ropes course at Parkridge Valley is one of many outdoor activities offered in the recreation therapy programs.
The ropes course at Parkridge Valley is one of many outdoor activities offered in the recreation therapy programs.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ELIZABETH FITE ?? Mindy Brown, left, is a certified recreation therapist at Parkridge Valley’s Child and Adolescent campus and David Hoover is an adventure education facilitato­r.
STAFF PHOTO BY ELIZABETH FITE Mindy Brown, left, is a certified recreation therapist at Parkridge Valley’s Child and Adolescent campus and David Hoover is an adventure education facilitato­r.

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