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Health & Wellness

The Healing Power of Pets

By Rebecca Armstrong, The Independent UK. Posted May 10, 2008.


Studies show that contact with domestic animals can prevent illness.
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As she makes her way through the hospital wards, Billie-Jean keeps up an impressive pace. She has to if she is going to see all the patients who are waiting for her. Wearing her official uniform, she looks neat and trim, and despite how busy she is, she always has time to stop if someone wants to say hello or slip her a Bonio. You see, Billie-Jean isn't a ward sister doing the rounds or a doctor bringing vital medicine, she's an Irish terrier. But despite the fact she's a canine, not human, carer, her medical value is second-to-none because she is a Pets As Therapy dog.

Pets As Therapy is a charity that takes pet dogs and cats to hospitals, hospices, residential care homes, day centres and special-needs schools. It was formed in 1983, explains chief executive Maureen Hennis, by a group of pet owners who were convinced that their animals could help other people. "At that time, people were moving into residential accommodation and nursing homes, and they had to give up their own pets," she says. "This wasn't only making them sad and depressed, sometimes it was actually making them ill."

The importance of regular contact with domestic animals has been highlighted by recent research conducted by the University of Minnesota. According to the study, having a cat around the house can cut the risk of having a heart attack or a stroke by almost half. After studying nearly 4,500 adults aged between 30 and 75 for 10 years, it was found that cat owners had a 40 per cent lower risk of suffering a fatal heart attack.

"For years we have known that psychological stress and anxiety are related to cardiovascular events, particularly heart attacks," says Dr Adnan Qureshi, executive director of the Minnesota Stroke Institute at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. According to Qureshi, the research shows that "essentially there is a benefit in relieving those inciting factors from pets". And in a study published last year, Dr Deborah Wells of Queen's University Belfast found that dog owners tend to suffer less from ill health, have lower cholesterol, and lower blood pressure. "It is possible that dogs can directly promote our well-being by buffering us from stress," says Dr Wells.

Today, Billie-Jean, along with her owner, Emma Charlton, is on her weekly visit to the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability in Putney, south London. The hospital is just one of the thousands of places that PAT animals visit every year. "When we first started, we used to have to look around for establishments for registered PAT dogs to visit. Now we have more than 900 establishments waiting for PAT dogs to visit in," says Hennis. "Currently, we have 3,600 dogs and 92 cats working in the community and they are benefiting more than 100,000 patients every single week in the UK." As Billie-Jean makes her way through the hospital, clad in a bright PAT vest and fresh from the grooming parlour, it's clear that she is a real favourite with the patients.

When Billie-Jean bumps into Scott Robertson in one of the hospital's corridors, his face is wreathed in smiles at the sight of her. Charlton slips him a dog biscuit, which he hands to Billie-Jean as she enthusiastically licks his hands.

Not all of the patients here can articulate their likes and dislikes as clearly, so Charlton always checks with the ward staff who will welcome some time with Billie-Jean. Tina Loughney, Charlton tells me, loves to see her. Loughney usually communicates through facial movements and her expressive hands but today she has a surprise for everyone. Loughney has dogs at home and Emma asks how they are. "All right," she says. Charlton is gobsmacked -- and thrilled. "That's the first time I've heard Tina speak." The staff agree. "It's moments like this that make it worthwhile," says Charlton, who has been visiting the hospital with Billie-Jean for the past two years.


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It's interesting, you know?
Posted by: JohnTodd on May 10, 2008 9:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had a dog as a visitor for a few days. Made me feel much better, just generally lifted my spirits as opposed to placebo (no dog).

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Great article
Posted by: odie-wan on May 12, 2008 3:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I enjoyed reading this article. Pets are amazing, I agree. I'd also be curious to know the benefits of pets having regular contact with people who have Depression, Bipolar Disorder, etc.

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a funny story
Posted by: captain sassy on May 12, 2008 3:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back before there was official pet therapy, I was sneaking my dog onto the psychiatric unit where I worked one weekend, as it really was a great thing for the patients. In the elevator, we ran into one of the housekeeping staff, an older Bulgarian woman.

"What's that dog doing here?" she asked.

I replied, "I'm taking her up to the psych ward."

"Oh", she replied with a very concerned look on her face. Bending down and taking the dog's face in her hands, she told it, "I hope you feel better!"

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They Don't Call Dogs "Man's Best Friend" for Nothing...
Posted by: SkeeterVT1 on May 12, 2008 3:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wonderful article. I have two dogs at home, with whom I share an incredible bond. My wife and I consider them "our four-legged kids." Animals do have souls, just as humans do.

Indeed, the unconditional love that a dog provides its human companion is the closest thing to God's unconditional love that you can experience while here on Earth -- especially for those of us who don't have children or whose children have grown up and left the nest to live on their own.

It's no accident that the very word, "dog," is God, spelled backwards.

Is it any wonder, then, that a dog is "Man's Best Friend?"

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Cats and heart attacks
Posted by: annekarina on May 12, 2008 3:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course cats can help prevent a heart attack in some cases. Cats are the original pace makers. Put one on your lap for a bit and see what happens to your heart beat as it synchronizes with the
cat's purr.

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» RE: Cats and heart attacks Posted by: missy5050
I bet the results would be the same if you substituted human eunuchs for animal pets.
Posted by: just john on May 12, 2008 5:08 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are the benefits of pet ownership enough to justify keeping animals in an artificial juvenile state for all their lives?

Yeah, pet ownership gives me the creeps. Imagine some larger being surgically removing both your means of reproduction (and adulthood) AND all means of escape (as in de-clawing) just for their sensual benefit.

Hey, we've had emperors who did just that! Do you think we should bring back the practice? Slaves can be very soothing, if kept in line properly.

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» I bet not Posted by: bookie
» Bet Accepted! Posted by: just john
» oh please Posted by: liberalibrarian
» RE: oh please Posted by: just john
» RE: Bet Accepted! Posted by: bookie
» Dogs and cats chose us Posted by: willymack
» Flaw in your argument Posted by: drmeow
» RE: Flaw in your argument Posted by: just john
Not just beneficial to our minds & Bodies
Posted by: Purple Girl on May 12, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Animals remind US we are The Stewards of th eWorld . The only species to not only be able to enjoy all the 'gifts' we ahve ben given by 'God' or nature- but our Duty & responsiblities that come with it!
I have been an 'Atheist' (Non Heirarchial Organized religious follower) For Decades- but have seen & touched 'God' in th eeyes of a new Born foal.Whether we are a 'Creation ' of a God or a Freak of nature is irrelevant,We are the ONLY species capable of caring & manageing All that Exists. It is OUR 'Meaning in Life' to do so and to Pass It On to the next generation of Stewards. Nor does it matter how the End may come (act of God or nature) - it is what we do While We are Here to acheive our generation obligation to the next!
Anything short of that divine and awesome doctrine is a Sin against 'god'/nature and more importantly, Our Decendants and all the relies on US for suruvival and a Future.

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Emotional Energy
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on May 12, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is important to give credit where credit is due. Emotional energy is very powerful, both positive and negative. The pets are simply a lens for that energy. It is only the nurture and affection they are shown that allows them to have a positive effect on people. Imagine presenting patients with a mangy abused whelp of a dog. You'd have patients dying left and right.

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» RE: Emotional Energy Posted by: just john
No Pets..!
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on May 12, 2008 9:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No matter what the undeniable true benefits are for humans having pets go look in the rental section and you'll see more than 70% of rentals say No Pets..!

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» RE: No Pets..! Posted by: just john
» RE: No Pets..! Posted by: blitzmesser
Great but....
Posted by: drricklippin on May 12, 2008 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Two comments-

I have met many people recently who tell me outright that they would rather have a relationship with a dog than with a human. Very sad commentary on the state of humanity.

For one aspect of pet's healing capacity check out The Institute for Touch Research (ITR) in Florida.

Be Well,

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,PA

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» RE: Great but.... Posted by: TheNamelessCity
Ever wake up in a bad mood?
Posted by: willymack on May 12, 2008 10:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't. My wife gets up before I do to get ready for work, and lets the dog and cat in. The first thing my dog does is to come into the bedroom and nuzzle my face, while his huge tail thumps against the closet door. This never fails to please me and put me into a good mood. After eating, my cat comes in, walks on my chest, and rubs his furry face against mine while purring loudly. I think a cat's purr is one of the most beautiful sounds in Nature. I love this communion with my non-human companions, and for this one reason alone, believe they make my life a better one than it would be otherwise.

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Still no affirmation from iguana, fish, bird or ant colony owners?
Posted by: just john on May 12, 2008 11:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My hypothesis is that the medical effects cited in the article come from the nearness of cats and dogs to humans in terms of company, and not from their "pet" nature.

Here's an experiment to test this: Try non-mammal pets versus feral mammals that have been sedated (and cleaned and de-loused, which I will grant is a non-trivial process.)

I suspect it's the presence of another breathing mammal that does it. (I know non-mammals also breathe, but I don't think it feels the same to us.)

We feel closer and more at ease with things we're breathing with. That's where the word "conspire" comes from.

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No need to restrict your animal friends to cats and dogs
Posted by: navy-vet on May 12, 2008 6:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe it's because my granddad was the first college-educated vetrinarian in Iowa, or that several cousins were and are, or that another cousin (all on the same side of the family) befriended unusual pets like a raccoon and deodorized skunk along with a series of weenie dogs.

Or maybe because we lived in an Illinois fishing shack out in the country when I was nine, and my mongrel pooch and I made friends with the elegant garter snakes and comical daddy longlegs that lived under the front porch--then as a teenager in South Florida, hung out at the Miami Serpentarium on weekends, strolling around with the research station's 5-foot long blue indigo around my shoulders, endlessly fascinated by the changing rainbow patterns of his scales.

Whatever, I've lived in a lot of apartments and have had to contend with restrictive leases, choosing tropical fish (who died when the heater thermostat went haywire) and several kinds of rodents. The most alert and intelligent were the white, pink-eyed fancy rats in my New York City apartment, soft-furred, beautiful little darlings. If you can't have a dog or cat, make friends with a fancy rat. Here's how my little friends helped me get through the anguish of 1968 (from one of my poems):
---------

. . .the war!
No longer could I abide
needless rows of tombstones,
villages crisped like toast,
a lost generation
who used to be promising young men.

In March I sent my final letter,
laying it all out, trying to explain.
The Navy kept me anyway until year’s end,
frozen in captivity
like The Prisoner in that summer’s teevee series:
a number, an ape,
my own worst enemy.

Dreadful spring, worse summer.
We watched the Soviets crush the Czechs,
Bobby Kennedy get murdered,
Chicago cops bash kids’ heads.
Heard the rifle shot
that killed Martin Luther King,
watched helplessly as ghettos went up in flames.

The only satisfactions were
hosting a crew of Clean for Gene collegians
who looked after my apartment
while I had unimportant organs removed
in a naval hospital
(Who needs an appendix anyway?);
Waiting in line five hours
for the White Album,
but Disraeli Gears was better;

And turning dusty tropical fish tanks
into homes for lovely white rats:
Kissy Suzuki, Ringnose, Popcorn.
Never will I forget their affection
and good humor.
Their entertainments kept me sane that year,
those little fuzzy britches.

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Good Therapists on the Cheap
Posted by: AlexLawyer on May 12, 2008 11:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My Labrador used to volunteer parttime at a children's mental health inpatient unit. The kids loved him, and he liked his visits there. Losing him was very painful, but I'm thankful for the unconditional love and good cheer he always brought into our lives.

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My best friends
Posted by: mindtrvlr on May 15, 2008 12:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can't wait till everyone leaves the house, and just me and my two dogs. Blissful peace and quiet and loving companions.

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» it worked for me! Posted by: donnee
I've got three cats
Posted by: Artemis3 on May 21, 2008 9:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
right now, and there were two others before these. They are terrific companions, and yes, I would much rather spend time with them than my moody and explosive significant other. One more outburst by him, and I just might!!!

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