Man’s Best Friend:
Study shows Seniors prefer dogs
Newswise
— A new Saint Louis University study shows there is some truth
in the old cliché that describes a dog as “man’s best friend.”
“Or at least a less
aggravating friend,” said study author William A. Banks, M.D.,
professor of geriatrics in the department of internal medicine
and professor of pharmacological and physiological sciences at
Saint Louis University School of Medicine.
Nursing home residents felt
much less lonely after spending time alone with a dog than they
did when they visited with a dog and other people. The research
will be published in the March 2006 issue of Anthrozoos 18(4).
“It was a strange finding,”
said Banks, who also is a staff physician at Veterans Affairs
Medical Center in St. Louis. “We had thought that the dog acts
as a social lubricant and increases the interaction between the
residents. We expected the group dog visits were going to work
better, but they didn’t.
“The residents found a little
quiet time with the pooch is a lot nicer than spending time with
a dog and other people,” he said.
Thirty-seven nursing home
residents who scored high on a loneliness scale said they wanted
to receive weekly, 30-minute visits from dogs. Half spent time
alone with the dog, and the other half spent time with one to
three other nursing home residents and the dog. While both
groups felt less lonely, the group that had one-on-one quality
time with the dog experienced a much more significant decrease
in loneliness after five to six weeks of visits.
The main way pets reduce
loneliness in nursing homes is simply by being with people, not
by enhancing socialization between people – for instance, giving
nursing home residents something to talk about or an experience
to share, Banks said.
“There is no need for a dog to
be a social lubricant or icebreaker in a nursing home. Residents
live with each other, eat breakfast, lunch and dinner with each
other, play bingo with each other,” Banks says. “The study also
found that the loneliest individuals benefited the most from
visits with dogs.”
Established in 1836, Saint
Louis University School of Medicine has the distinction of
awarding the first M.D. degree west of the Mississippi River.
Saint Louis University School of Medicine is a pioneer in
geriatric medicine, organ transplantation, chronic disease
prevention, cardiovascular disease, neurosciences and vaccine
research, among others. The School of Medicine trains physicians
and biomedical scientists, conducts medical research, and
provides health services on a local, national and international
level.