A Masters thesis on Healing Gardens for Veterans with PTSD

Image courtesy of Care2.com

Image courtesy of Care2.com

It’s Veteran’s Day, 2011, a good time to highlight some new research on gardens for veterans with PTSD. This is such an important topic, and Brock Anderson decided to make it his Thesis for his Master of Landscape Architecture at Utah State University.

“An Exploration of the Potential Benefits of Healing Gardens on Veterans with PTSD,” by Brock Anderson, is now availalble online for download at http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/gradreports/50/.

Here’s the Abstract:

Healing gardens are places that facilitate in improving or restoring an individual’s mental or physical health. Today, therapeutic landscape design is a growing facet of landscape architecture. This study looks at the potential benefits of using healing gardens in addition to traditional methods of treatment for veterans suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

A reasonable amount of research has been done into the area of therapeutic landscapes and their influence on certain populations, but the potential positive effects these healing gardensmay hold for veterans suffering from PTSD seems to be unidentified. This study examines the history of healing gardens, problems facing veteran populations today, current treatment methods for PTSD, and how healing gardens could be beneficial to veterans with PTSD. A Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare facility that is in the process of implementing a healing garden was usedto determine how their PTSD patients will potentially use a healing garden space during treatment.

The purpose of this study was to describe some of the potential benefits that healing gardens could have on veterans suffering from PTSD. Other VA facilities can use this information in the future when implementing healing gardens for PTSD patients. This study is intended to increase awareness of the potential benefits healing gardens might hold for veterans suffering from PTSD and encourage further research into the area.

Recommended citation: Anderson, Brock Justin, “An Exploration of the Potential Benefits of Healing Gardens on Veterans with PTSD” (2011). All Graduate Reports and Creative Projects. Paper 50. http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/gradreports/50

Many thanks to Brock for sharing this with us!

And if that weren’t enough great stuff for one day, here’s an excellent article by Janet Brown, published recently in Healthcare Design Magazine, about a wonderful healing garden and horticultural therapy program at the East Orange NJ Veterans Affairs: http://www.healthcaredesignmagazine.com/article/va-campus-takes-healing-gardens.

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7 Responses to “A Masters thesis on Healing Gardens for Veterans with PTSD”

  1. Jan says:

    I am so glad to have found your blog. I will follow it with great interest…

  2. jgnh says:

    Great find. I’m currently writing my MLA thesis on the same topic. However I’m also exploring the extent to which a designed landscape can assist in the direct therapy for veteran PTSD patients (i.e. Exposure Therapy).

    Anyone know how I can contact Mr. Anderson or someone else privy to this specific topic?

    Any leads would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
    hartman.352 (at) osu.edu

  3. Naomi Sachs says:

    You’re most welcome. I couldn’t agree more.

  4. Stacey says:

    Thank you for sharing this beautiful project. Our veterans deserve all the best we have to offer and healing gardens are an integral piece of the solution.

  5. Pia says:

    This I will read with great interest – I so believe in the healing power of gardens and gardening for people affected by stress and trauma – so thankful you shared this :)

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