Western Journal of Emergency Medicine (Sep 2012)

Therapy Dogs in the Emergency Department

  • Nickolas Nahm,
  • Jill Lubin,
  • Jeffrey Lubin,
  • Blake K. Bankwitz,
  • McAllister Castelaz,
  • Xin Chen,
  • Joel C. Shackson,
  • Manik N. Aggarwal,
  • Vicken Y. Totten

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. 363 – 365

Abstract

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Introduction: This study examined acceptance by staff and patients of a therapy dog (TD) in the emergency department (ED).Methods: Immediately after TD visits to a University Hospital ED, all available ED staff, patients, and their visitors were invited to complete a survey.Results: Of 125 ‘‘patient’’ and 105 staff responses, most were favorable. Ninety-three percent of patients and 95% of staff agreed that TDs should visit EDs; 87.8% of patients and 92% of staff approved of TDs for both adult and pediatric patients. Fewer than 5% of either patients or staff were afraid of the TDs. Fewer than 10% of patients and staff thought the TDs posed a sanitary risk or interfered with staff work.Conclusion: Both patients and staff approve of TDs in an ED. The benefits of animal-assisted therapy should be further explored in the ED setting.

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