Animal-Facilitated Therapy Program: Outcomes From Caring Canines, a Program for Patients and Staff on an Inpatient Surgical Oncology Unit

Pamela Ginex, EdD, RN, OCN®; Mary Montefusco, MSN, ACNPBC, OCN®, BMTCN®; Glenn Zecco, RN, BSN; Nicole Trocchia Mattessich, MSN, FNP-BC, OCN®; Jacquelyn Burns, RN, MSN, NE-BC; Jane Hedal-Siegel, BFA; Jane Kopelman, CPDT-KA; Kay See Tan, PhD
CJON
10.1188/18.CJON.193-198

Description

Background: Animal-facilitated therapy (AFT) is a complementary medicine intervention. To the authors’ knowledge, no study has investigated the benefits of an AFT program in an adult surgical oncology setting.

Objectives: The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of an AFT program on patients and staff on a surgical oncology unit.

Methods: A quasiexperimental design was used for the patient group, and a pre-/post-test design was used for the staff group. The intervention involved the AFT program being fully integrated on a surgical inpatient unit. Outcomes included patient-reported symptoms and quality-of-life (QOL) outcomes for patients, as well as professional QOL for staff.

Findings: QOL indicators improved for all patients, and the level of energy at follow-up was significantly higher in the AFT group after adjusting for baseline. For staff, compassion satisfaction was high and burnout was low.

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