Working like a Dog: Exploring the Role of a Therapy Dog in Clinical Exercise Physiology Practice.
Melainie CameronEmily HewittElizabeth HollittJacqueline WoodSamantha BrownPublished in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2022)
Therapy animals in clinical settings are purported to reduce patients' anxiety, decrease agitated behaviour, serve as social mediators, enhance the social atmosphere, and increase patients' openness towards practitioners. A therapy dog worked alongside her exercise physiologist handler for approximately 1 day/week in a university clinic. The canine and handler functioned as a team, while the handler simultaneously undertook supervision of students. The clinic was open 24 h/week, and no other therapeutic animal was present for any part of the week. We explored, via surveys and interviews, human responses to the dog. The survey comprised 15 statement items regarding the canine's role, behaviour, and acceptability in the clinic, ranked from strongly disagree (-2) to strongly agree (2), followed by an open item inviting participants to follow up interviews. Eleven (11) clinical clients and seven (7) students completed the survey. One client had not encountered the canine; these data were excluded. Four (4) participants from the client sample provided subsequent telephone interviews. All participants identified the canine as well-behaved; no participants considered that she detracted from their exercise sessions. Most participants were equivocal to statements regarding social lubrication and openness to practitioners; only three clients and two students identified that they felt more willing to share health information; three students identified that they felt they could confide more in the canine than in the practitioner. Interviewees' reports were similarly favourable, reinforcing the information obtained from the surveys. Interview transcripts were subject to thematic analysis, which focussed around four key themes: (1) the canine's good behaviour, (2) clients giving permission, and the canine as both (3) a pleasant distraction from the effort of exercise, and (4) nice to have. A therapy dog may enhance some aspects of exercise physiology service delivery.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- high intensity
- end stage renal disease
- health information
- healthcare
- mental health
- physical activity
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- cross sectional
- resistance training
- high school
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- social media
- hiv testing
- bone marrow
- patient reported outcomes
- emergency department
- cell therapy
- big data
- mesenchymal stem cells
- body composition
- artificial intelligence
- depressive symptoms
- men who have sex with men
- electronic health record
- sleep quality
- machine learning
- study protocol
- drug induced