Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Recovering
with Four-Legged Friends requires less Pain
Medication
Newswise — Adults who use pet therapy while
recovering from total joint-replacement
surgery require 50 percent less pain
medication than those who do not. These
findings were presented at the 18th Annual
Conference of the International Society of
Anthrozoology and the First Human Animal
Interaction Conference (HAI) in Kansas City,
Mo.
“Evidence suggests that animal-assisted
therapy (AAT) can have a positive effect on
a patient’s psychosocial, emotional and
physical well being,” said Julia Havey, RN,
study presenter and senior systems analyst,
Department of Medical Center Information
Systems, Loyola University Health System (LUHS).
“These data further support these benefits
and build the case for expanding the use of
pet therapy in recovery.”
Animal lover Havey, and colleague Frances
Vlasses, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, began raising
puppies to become assistance dogs more than
a decade ago through a program called Canine
Companions for Independence (CCI).
The non-profit organization provides highly
trained assistance dogs to people with
physical and developmental disabilities free
of charge.
“As nurses, we are committed to improving
the quality of life for others,” said
Vlasses, associate professor & chair of
Health Systems Management and Policy, Loyola
University Chicago Marcella Niehoff School
of Nursing. “This service experience has
provided us with a unique way to combine our
love for animals with care for people with
special needs.
In addition to the financial obligations
that go along with raising a puppy, Havey
and Vlasses take the dogs to class and teach
them house and public etiquette until they
are old enough to enter a formal training
program.
“You might see our four-legged friends
around Loyola’s campus from time to time,”
said Havey, RN, senior systems analyst,
Department of Medical Center Information
Systems, LUHS.
“Part of our responsibility as volunteers is
to acclimate these dogs to people. The
Loyola community has so graciously supported
this training and the use of service dogs on
campus.”
When the dogs are approximately 15 months of
age, Havey and Vlasses return them to CCI’s
regional training center for six to nine
months where they are trained to be one of
four types of assistance dogs.
Service dogs are trained to assist with
physical tasks and provide social support to
their partners. These dogs learn 40 commands
to enhance the independence of people with
ailments ranging from spinal cord injuries
to multiple sclerosis.
Facility dogs are trained to work with a
professional in a visitation, education or
health- care setting. They can perform more
than 40 commands designed to motivate,
rehabilitate or soothe clients with special
needs.
Skilled companion dogs are trained to work
with an adult or child with a disability
under the guidance of a facilitator.
Disabilities served include cerebral palsy,
muscular dystrophy, autism and Down’s
syndrome.
A skilled companion also can serve as a
social bridge to people who are not used to
relating to a person with disabilities.
Hearing dogs are trained to recognize and
alert partners to various sounds, such as a
doorbell, alarm clock or smoke alarm. The
average service life of each dog is eight
years. After that time, the dog retires to
live out its golden years as a pet.
Havey
and Vlasses believe that animal-assisted
therapy will ultimately become a standard of
care for healing. The pair will continue to
advocate for this therapeutic option through
public speaking engagements and
philanthropic work.
Based in the western suburbs of Chicago,
Loyola University Health System is a
quaternary care system with a 61-acre main
medical center campus, the 36-acre Gottlieb
Memorial Hospital campus and 25 primary and
specialty care facilities in Cook, Will and
DuPage counties.
The medical center campus is conveniently
located in Maywood, 13 miles west of the
Chicago Loop and 8 miles east of Oak Brook,
Ill. The heart of the medical center campus,
Loyola University Hospital, is a
570-licensed bed facility. It houses a Level
1 Trauma Center, a Burn Center and the
Ronald McDonald® Children’s Hospital of
Loyola University Medical Center.
Also on campus are the Cardinal Bernardin
Cancer Center, Loyola Outpatient Center,
Center for Heart & Vascular Medicine and
Loyola Oral Health Center as well as the LUC
Stritch School of Medicine, the LUC Marcella
Niehoff School of Nursing and the Loyola
Center for Fitness.
Loyola's Gottlieb campus in Melrose Park
includes the 274-licensed bed community
hospital, the Professional Office Building
housing 150 private practice clinics, the
Adult Day Center, the Gottlieb Center for
Fitness and Marjorie G. Weinberg Cancer Care
Center.
... ..
...
...