Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care

The aim of this study has been to investigate the effects of Green Care services for youth in vulnerable situations risking social exclusion. Green Care enterprises represent alternative arenas in which people can work with animals, agriculture and other tasks related to nature. We interviewed nine...

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Main Authors: Ragnfrid Eline Kogstad, Rita Agdal, Mark Steven Hopfenbeck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-06-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/6/6052
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spelling doaj-e574b1f1f1f34aa6a550e8d734b8250c2020-11-24T23:27:08ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012014-06-011166052606810.3390/ijerph110606052ijerph110606052Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green CareRagnfrid Eline Kogstad0Rita Agdal1Mark Steven Hopfenbeck2Department of Public Health, Hedmark University College, Box 400, 2418 Elverum, NorwayDepartment of Public Health, Hedmark University College, Box 400, 2418 Elverum, NorwayDepartment of Health Care and Nursing, Gjövik University College, Box 191, 2802 Gjövik, NorwayThe aim of this study has been to investigate the effects of Green Care services for youth in vulnerable situations risking social exclusion. Green Care enterprises represent alternative arenas in which people can work with animals, agriculture and other tasks related to nature. We interviewed nine persons, aged 17–27, working in three different places, two or more times over a two-year period. We looked at essential beneficial factors in order to better understand how the “green” element could add to more traditional recovery factors. We found that the youth described core success factors corresponding to well-known recovery factors such as recognition, supportive relationships, motivation, meaning, positive coping, self-esteem, confidence and hope. The effective factors can be described as: (a) The leader’s ability to create a good group atmosphere, (b) the varied tasks which allow step-wise increases in self-efficacy, and (c) experiences with animals and in nature that provide comfort for youth who lack trust in people and need safe situations to recover a positive sense of self. We followed a process in which several persons gradually regained self-respect and the motivation for further education or a job outside the Green Care enterprise. The study illustrates that Green Care can be an important supplement in helping people back to a satisfying life and meaningful roles in society.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/6/6052Green Careyouth social inclusionrecovery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ragnfrid Eline Kogstad
Rita Agdal
Mark Steven Hopfenbeck
spellingShingle Ragnfrid Eline Kogstad
Rita Agdal
Mark Steven Hopfenbeck
Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Green Care
youth social inclusion
recovery
author_facet Ragnfrid Eline Kogstad
Rita Agdal
Mark Steven Hopfenbeck
author_sort Ragnfrid Eline Kogstad
title Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
title_short Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
title_full Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
title_fullStr Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
title_full_unstemmed Narratives of Natural Recovery: Youth Experience of Social Inclusion through Green Care
title_sort narratives of natural recovery: youth experience of social inclusion through green care
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2014-06-01
description The aim of this study has been to investigate the effects of Green Care services for youth in vulnerable situations risking social exclusion. Green Care enterprises represent alternative arenas in which people can work with animals, agriculture and other tasks related to nature. We interviewed nine persons, aged 17–27, working in three different places, two or more times over a two-year period. We looked at essential beneficial factors in order to better understand how the “green” element could add to more traditional recovery factors. We found that the youth described core success factors corresponding to well-known recovery factors such as recognition, supportive relationships, motivation, meaning, positive coping, self-esteem, confidence and hope. The effective factors can be described as: (a) The leader’s ability to create a good group atmosphere, (b) the varied tasks which allow step-wise increases in self-efficacy, and (c) experiences with animals and in nature that provide comfort for youth who lack trust in people and need safe situations to recover a positive sense of self. We followed a process in which several persons gradually regained self-respect and the motivation for further education or a job outside the Green Care enterprise. The study illustrates that Green Care can be an important supplement in helping people back to a satisfying life and meaningful roles in society.
topic Green Care
youth social inclusion
recovery
url http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/6/6052
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