4.4 Article

Perspectives on facility dogs from pediatric hospital personnel: A qualitative content analysis of patient, family, and staff outcomes

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ctcp.2022.101534

Keywords

Therapy dogs; Facility dogs; Human-animal interaction; Animal-assisted intervention; Child life specialists

Funding

  1. Elanco Animal Health
  2. National Institutes of Health, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute [KL2TR001106, UL1TR002529]

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This qualitative study examines the role of full-time resident facility dogs in children's hospitals. The findings suggest that facility dogs have positive impacts on the daily lives of pediatric healthcare professionals, improving their stress and wellbeing, staff relationships, and job-related morale. Additionally, they benefit patients and families by helping build rapport, providing comfort and positive resources, and normalizing the hospital environment.
An increasing number of children's hospitals feature full-time resident facility dogs, which are specially trained to work alongside pediatric healthcare professionals to improve the patient experience. This qualitative study aimed to describe the role that facility dogs play in the lives of patients, families, and hospital staff. A total of N = 73 pediatric healthcare professionals that worked with 46 facility dogs across 17 children's hospitals in the US completed a set of open-ended questions in an online survey. Responses were analyzed via a conventional thematic analysis and organized into themes and sub-themes. Facility dogs were described to benefit pediatric healthcare professionals' daily lives through improving stress and wellbeing, staff relationships, and job-related morale. Negative impacts included increased burdens and responsibilities in the workplace. Facility dogs were also described to benefit patients and families by helping build rapport, providing a comforting presence and positive resource, and normalizing the hospital environment. In conclusion, facility dog programs were found to be a promising complementary intervention to benefit both staff as well as and patients and families. Future research is warranted to examine short-term and long-term implications of facility dog programs for staff, patient, and family wellbeing.

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