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Perceived benefits of animal-assisted therapy in the oncology waiting room

Authors :
Hannah Jessup
Kaitlin Stevens
Linda L. Buettner, PhD, Lrt, Ctrs
Gustav C. Magrinat
YingChen Wang
Source :
American Journal of Recreation Therapy. 10:25-34
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Weston Medical Publishing, 2011.

Abstract

This study identified perceived benefits of animal-assisted therapy (AAT) on anxiety, pain, communication, and cognition among patients waiting for treatment in a large urban cancer center. A convenience sample of 75 patients and five family members (n = 80) waiting for treatment completed a survey about AAT. After giving informed consent, participants were asked to complete questions related to attitudes about offering a complementary therapy dog program in the hospital. Findings indicated that most respondents were very accepting of AAT in the cancer center, with 78 percent indicating that they would like to take part in this complementary therapy. The perceived benefits of AAT included that it would provide a method for positive communication (93 percent), cognitive stimulation (92.3 percent), it would help to pass time more quickly (88.8 percent), it would help people to feel more comfortable at the cancer center (84.8 percent), and it would reduce participants’ pain (71.3 percent) and anxiety (68.4 percent). The association between gender and anxiety produced a statistically meaningful result in this study about predicting subjects’ participation in the program. Ultimately, offering recreational therapy facilitated AAT in cancer center waiting areas may provide benefits for patients and provide a competitive edge to hospitals.

Details

ISSN :
15394131
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Recreation Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5aa6ab2ebae6e37aaa3717691ecafc32
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5055/ajrt.2011.0025