Millennium Post

‘YOGA MAY BOOST OVERALL health of kids in care homes’

Yoga practice in children’s homes has the potential to encourage togetherne­ss and improve health and psychologi­cal outcomes

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Practising Kundalini yoga - which involves meditation, breathing exercises, chanting mantras and adapting certain postures - may help improve the health and psychologi­cal wellbeing of children in care homes, a new study has claimed.

Researcher­s from the University of Nottingham in the UK found that children in care homes have a higher degree of physical and mental health needs than their notin-care counterpar­ts, and in comparison to children who are in other forms of care, such as foster care.

The study was carried out under the belief of ‘creative practice as mutual recovery’, and looked at the idea that shared creativity, collective experience and mutual benefit can promote resilience in mental health and well-being among communitie­s that have been traditiona­lly divided - for example children’s home staff and children.

Researcher­s tested a 20-week Kundalini yoga programme in three children’s homes situated in the East Midlands. The programme was evaluated according to recruitmen­t and retention rates, self-reporting questionna­ires from the participan­ts and semi-structured interviews.

The study shows that yoga practice in children’s homes, especially when participat­ion is high, has the potential to encourage togetherne­ss and mutuality and improve health and psychologi­cal outcomes for children in care, as well as within the workforce.

All the participan­ts reported that the study was personally meaningful and experience­d both individual - like feeling more relaxed - and social benefits - for example feeling more open and positive.

Individual­s reported that the yoga sessions helped to show them beneficial exercises that they could use in various contexts, such as before going to bed, or during emotionall­y challengin­g times at work as well as at home.

The social benefits were also far-reaching with some participan­ts reporting that they felt more positive, open to others and, as a consequenc­e, had seen an improvemen­t in their social lives and out of work.

Some staff and residents noticed that other people also interacted more positively with them.

“The findings are very exciting as they suggest that the practice of Kundalini yoga, involving both staff and children in care, is a plausible interventi­on that can lead to individual and social benefits,” said Elvira Perez from University of Nottingham.

“This could have potentiall­y huge, wide-reaching benefits for children in care as well as for all the staff working in residentia­l settings,” said Perez.

“The study has generated a number of valuable guiding principles and recommenda­tions that might underpin the developmen­t of any future interventi­on for children in care and the staff working in these homes,” Perez added.

The study was published in The Journal of Children’s Services.

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