Table of Contents
There are many ways dogs are humans' best friends. There are seeing eye dogs, hearing ear dogs, dogs that sniff out cancer, and dogs for people who suffer anxiety, depression, and seizure disorders. Now from Germany comes a study of dogs for dementia.
One of the best ways to get professional advice on the use of pets in assisting older family members and friends who have Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia is to contact Pet Partners, at the link posted below this article. However, if you are working on your own, here are 10 more important considerations for a successful animal-assisted intervention.
- Work with an animal who is familiar with, and gentle with, children and unpredictable adults. Aggressive animals simply have to be excluded from elder care.
- Cats are not well suited to elder care. Many older adults have thin skin, or have to take anticoagulant (blood thinning) medications. Kitty claws and older people are not a good combination, and a single cat scratch could set back progress with older adult, and result in injury to the cat. Unless the cat already knows the elder, keep cats at home.
- Bring just one dog to the therapy session. Dogs are territorial and competitive. You don't want the chaos that multiple dogs could bring to the session.
- Let your dog become familiar with the "lay of the land" before bringing the animal to meet seniors. Your dog needs to be familiar with the smells, sights, and sounds of the nursing home before interaction with seniors to avoid upset to the dog and to the residents of the home.
- Make sure the people you are visiting with your therapy dog are not afraid of or allergic to dogs. Try to bring dogs to visit people who have had dogs as pets, and who have had happy experiences with dogs.
- Let elders know you are bringing dogs before you take the dog into the room. Even if they do not respond to the announcement, it is a good idea to prepare the elder for the encounter.
- Sometimes older people forget how to interact with dogs. If the elder pinches the dog, or pulls its ears, or hits or yells at it, remove the dog from the room, for the protection of the dog and the elder. This is not a sign of cruelty. It is just sometimes a manifestation of the disease.
- Don't make the dog do all the work. It is still up to you to make small talk with the elderly people you are visiting. Don't force the conversation to be about the dog. But allow elders all the happy interaction they can muster with their new canine friend.
- Know that seniors who have dementia may be "with it" one moment and emotionally absent the next. It's not personal. Value the interaction you have when you have it.
- And realize that progress may be slow and in small increments. Age-related cognitive decline is a devastating disease. You may see little progress between visits. However, you may be reopening worlds of communication for that elderly person and their spouses, family members, and friends in ways that make the condition much easier to bear for all involved.
See Also: Active Brain Keeps Dementia Away
- Brauser D. 'Dogs for Dementia' Program Improves Social Behavior. Medscape Conference News. 26 June 2014.
- Photo courtesy of James Blucher by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/jive667/8068669888
- Photo courtesy of Found Animals Foundation by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/foundanimalsfoundation/8055189557
- www.petpartners.org
Your thoughts on this