Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
India

Sex-Abuse Therapy Program At Alberta Ranch Helping Children: Study

The Canadian Press, 18 Apr, 2016 11:00 AM
  • Sex-Abuse Therapy Program At Alberta Ranch Helping Children: Study
EDMONTON — A new report says a therapy program at an Alberta ranch has helped child sex-abuse survivors suffering post-traumatic stress disorder and other trauma symptoms.
 
Therapy sessions delivered in a friendly camp-like atmosphere were designed to treat kids between 8 and 12 before they develop self-destructive behaviours such as seriously harming themselves or becoming addicted to alcohol or drugs later in life.
 
"The present results are very supportive that the clinical intervention program leads to a clinically meaningful improvement in symptoms of PTSD, as well as improvements in anxiety and mood symptoms," reads the University of Alberta study published in the Journal of Child and Adolescent Behaviour.
 
"This would support suggestions that such an intensive approach could be more widely utilized."
 
The program was designed by a research team led by Prof. Peter Silverstone, a psychiatrist. Little Warriors, a charity that works to prevent and treat child sexual abuse, designed The Be Brave Ranch where the program is delivered.
 
The clinical trials last year involved small groups of girls and boys who lived at the ranch outside of Edmonton and underwent hours of therapy with psychologists each day. Parents stayed at other lodges at the ranch. 
 
The kids were taught everyday life skills and then gradually were encouraged to speak about the abuse with therapists.
 
After formal sessions, the children took part in hours of "fun" therapy that included structured play, physical exercise, arts and crafts, music, role playing and interacting with horses and dogs.
 
Silverstone said the therapy, the ranch and the children making friends with each other were all factors in the positive results.
 
"It is very hard to put in a scientific document the very real and meaningful changes that you see in these kids," he said in an interview.
 
"They are able to make proper emotional attachments. They can start trusting people again. They can be happier, less depressed, less anxious, and they can start enjoying life in a way that they were just not capable of doing before."
 
Glori Meldrum, the driving force behind Little Warriors, is heartened by the study's findings.
 
Meldrum, who was sexually abused when she was a child, hopes the study will persuade the Alberta government to help fund the program, which relies on donations.
 
Little Warriors has felt the same financial squeeze as other charities in Alberta due to a slumping provincial economy.
 
"We survive on the generosity of others," she said. "Some government contracts would give us some more stability and allow us to treat these kids that are in care of the government, who often need lots of help."
 
Meldrum said she is to meet with Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir in June. She also plans to pitch the Northwest Territories and other governments on The Be Brave Ranch.
 
The scientific results give the program credibility, she said, but a person need only speak with children who have spent time at the ranch to appreciate how the experience has improved their lives.
 
"The kids love it. It is a really warm, loving environment. They feel really safe there."

MORE India ARTICLES

Congress manifesto promises right to health

Congress manifesto promises right to health
The Congress Wednesday promised to scale up spending on healthcare and bring in a bill ensuring right to health if brought back to power after the general election.  

Congress manifesto promises right to health

Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst

Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst
Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi Wednesday challenged the perception that the BJP was most likely to win the Lok Sabha election and said "this balloon will explode".

Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst

'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'
Indian Mujahideen's operational head Tehsin Akhtar, now in police custody, embraced terrorism when he was only 18 years old. Such was his passion that his handlers immediately inducted him into the banned outfit

'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370
Sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik Tuesday paid tribute to the passengers and crew members of the lost Malaysian airliner by creating a sand sculpture on the beach of Puri, his home town in Odisha.

First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi
In what will be the mother of all battles in the coming election, AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal announced Tuesday he will take on BJP's prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi from this Hindu holy city.

It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration

The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration
This is the hair-rising tale of 12 Indians cheated by a dodgy agent who extracts big money from them on false promises and sent them off on “the donkey route” through Russia and Europe to Britain. 

The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration