Adventure Therapy for Adolescents with Complex Trauma: A Scoping Review and Analysis

Author:

Pringle Graham1ORCID,Boddy Jennifer1,Slattery Maddy1ORCID,Harris Paul1

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences and Social Work, Griffith University, Meadowbrook, Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Background: Childhood adversity is linked with mental health concerns, including complex trauma (CT), whereas positive experiences may be restorative. Treatment for CT with adolescents commonly uses therapies administered indoors. Yet outdoor adventure, being rich in positive experiences, may also be appropriate. Purpose: This article examines how adventure practices may be healing for adolescents with CT. Methodology/Approach: A scoping review of literature since 2014 on adventure therapy (AT) for 12- to 18-year-olds with CT was undertaken. Refining searches from six databases identified six texts which met inclusion criteria. A seventh paper was added manually. Findings/Conclusions: CT-informed adventure tended toward a tri-phasic approach: safety, processing, and integration. Adventure benefits included improvements in attachment, skills, schemas, and stress management. An ecological approach was identified, through the analysis, as were some well-intended but harmful practices that a human rights-based practice framework may help avoid. Implications: Adopting an ecological and human rights-based approach as frames for AT research and practice may yield new insights and enhance program effectiveness for youth with CT. This should apply to adventure generally and specifically to AT; however, more research is needed given the paucity of available texts.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Education

Reference37 articles.

1. AABAT (2019). Ethical principles. Retrieved 22 March from https://aabat.org.au/ethical-principles/

2. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework

3. A Meta-Analysis of Adventure Therapy Outcomes and Moderators

4. Toward an experimental ecology of human development.

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