PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Can Animal Assisted Interventions counteract apathy and improve physical activity levels in psychiatric patients with cognitive disability? A case study.

Journal:
Journal of bodywork and movement therapies
Year:
2024
Authors:
Cerulli, Claudia et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Movement · Italy

Plain-English summary

This study looked at how spending time with animals, like dogs and horses, might help two patients who have both psychiatric disorders and mild cognitive impairment. Over four months, the patients participated in activities with their animals, which seemed to help reduce their feelings of apathy (lack of interest or motivation) and improve their physical abilities. By the end of the study, one patient showed a 20.6% decrease in apathy and the other a 9.8% decrease, along with improvements in their physical fitness tests. These early results suggest that animal-assisted activities could be a helpful addition to traditional treatments for these patients.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with psychiatric disorders experience a reduced quality of life also due to the antipsychotic drugs assumed, that negatively affects their cognitive abilities. A healthy lifestyle, such as physical activity, can improve both functional abilities and mental health of patients with a dual diagnosis, psychiatric and cognitive. Despite this knowledge, these people are more sedentary than the general population, probably because of their apathy, core aspects of the illness. Animal Assisted Interventions (AAIs) seem to be a valid tool to stimulate them to practice physical exercise thanks to the empathy generated by the relationship with the animal. METHODS: This case study aims to evaluate the effect of 4 months AAIs on apathy and physical efficiency in 2 patients with dual diagnoses. Patient A and patient B, affected by psychiatric disorders and mild cognitive impairment, were recruited to perform an AAI, one with a dog and the other with a horse. RESULTS: At the end of the study data showed a decrease of apathy in both patients: -20,6% in patient A and -9.8% in patient B, as well as a reduction of psychiatric symptoms. Moreover, both patients improved the functional parameters evaluated through the Short Physical Battery Test (patient A = +33.3%; patient B = +28.6%). CONCLUSIONS: The preliminary results of this case report suggest that well-structured, individualized AAIs, with a horse or with a dog, could be considered as a useful adjunctive therapy to the usual treatment programs to improve both functional abilities and mental health in psychiatric patients.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39593635/