| Literature DB >> 30967589 |
Karin Hediger1,2,3, Stefan Thommen4, Cora Wagner4, Jens Gaab4, Margret Hund-Georgiadis5.
Abstract
Animal-assisted therapy (AAT) is increasingly used to address impaired social competence in patients with acquired brain injury. However, the efficacy of AAT has not been tested in these patients. We used a randomised, controlled within subject trial to determine the effects of AAT on social competence in patients undergoing stationary neurorehabilitation. Participants received both AAT sessions and paralleled conventional therapy sessions. The patients' social behaviour was systematically coded on the basis of video recordings of therapy sessions. Moreover, mood, treatment motivation and satisfaction was measured during each therapy session. We analysed 222 AAT and 219 control sessions of 19 patients with linear mixed models. Patients showed a significantly higher amount of social behaviour during AAT. Furthermore, patients' positive emotions, verbal and non-verbal communication, mood, treatment motivation and satisfaction were increased in the presence of an animal. Neutral emotions were reduced but no effect was found regarding negative emotions. Our results show that AAT increases aspects of social competence and leads to higher emotional involvement of patients with acquired brain injury, reflected in higher social engagement, motivation and satisfaction during a therapeutic session.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30967589 PMCID: PMC6456498 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-42280-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1CONSORT flowchart.
Figure 2Differences in patient total social behaviour between AAT and conventional therapy sessions (control). Bars represent means with standard deviations.
Figure 3Effects of AAT and conventional therapy sessions (control) for each patient separately over the course of time. Lines and corresponding CI’s were estimated by lowess algorithm.
Behavioural outcomes (in percentage of observed time during a therapy session).
| Behaviour | Control M% (SD) | AAT M% (SD) | b | 95% CI | df | F-value | ICC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total social behaviour | 8.68 (8.85) | 29.22 (15.66) | 20.47 | 18.32–22.62 | 1;421.00 | 351.51 | <0.001* | 0.21 |
| Total verbal communication | 19.04 (20.24) | 25.40 (19.44) | 6.32 | 3.77–8.86 | 1;420.91 | 23.76 | <0.001* | 0.57 |
| Verbal active | 6.31 (8.80) | 13.65 (11.21) | 7.30 | 5.87–8.73 | 1;421.12 | 100.76 | <0.001* | 0.44 |
| Verbal reactive | 13.51 (13.52) | 11.02 (11.20) | −2.44 | −3.91–−0.98 | 1;407.86 | 10.81 | 0.001* | 0.67 |
| Total non-verbal interactiona | 5.26 (7.09) | 31.94 (17.54) | 26.65 | 24.29–29.01 | 1;421.53 | 492.65 | <0.001* | 0.12 |
| Gaze | 10.40 (12.76) | 52.89 (21.22) | 42.42 | 39.26–45.58 | 1;421.95 | 694.51 | <0.001* | 0.08 |
| Body movement | 4.33 (10.24) | 28.37 (19.98) | 24.06 | 21.36–26.77 | 1;421.40 | 306.35 | <0.001* | 0.18 |
| Physical contact | 1.53 (9.70) | 18.32 (18.50) | 16.84 | 14.19–19.49 | 1;421.16 | 156.10 | <0.001* | 0.09 |
| Positive emotion | 3.75 (4.57) | 6.95 (7.47) | 3.24 | 2.28–4.19 | 1;409.10 | 44.44 | <0.001* | 0.36 |
| Negative emotion | 0.59 (2.05) | 0.31 (1.34) | −0.27 | −0.58–0.04 | 1;409.14 | 2.85 | 0.09 | 0.09 |
| Neutral emotion | 94.20 (6.60) | 92.73 (7.64) | −2.97 | −3.97–−1.97 | 1;409.10 | 33.91 | <0.001* | 0.34 |
AAT: animal-assisted therapy, M: mean in % of observed time (aadjusted for possible parallel behaviour), SD: standard deviation, d: coefficient indicating difference in percentages (effect size), CI: confidence interval, df: degrees of freedom (numerator; denominator), ICC: Intraclass correlation coefficient, *statistically significant.