| Literature DB >> 32231132 |
Kristýna Machová1, Radka Procházková2, Mariana Vadroňová1, Michaela Součková1, Eliška Prouzová1.
Abstract
As university students face many stressful situations, especially during the examination period, this study focused on the use of animal-assisted activities (AAAs) with a dog as a means of relieving students' stress before a final exam. The aim was to determine whether a 10-min interaction with a dog affected subjectively evaluated stress and mood, objective blood pressure, and heart rate. Ninety-three female students (mean age = 22.5 years; standard deviation = 3.8 years) were divided into three groups according to their preference. The first group underwent AAAs (n = 26), the second group chose a relaxation technique (n = 28), and the last one was a control group (n = 39). Physiological values were measured using a pressure gauge and the subjective feelings of stress and mood were evaluated by the Likert scale 1-5. The AAA group showed significant improvement after 10 min of interaction in both mood and stress, with no change in heart rate and blood pressure. The remaining groups showed a significant decrease in blood pressure, but not in heart rate, with different evaluations of mood and stress. AAAs with a dog appear to be effective in improving students' mood and stress without affecting their physiological parameters.Entities:
Keywords: animal assisted activity; dog; stress; students’ health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231132 PMCID: PMC7178231 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Changes in heart rate and blood pressure in groups A (animal-assisted activities with a dog), B (selected relaxation technique), and C (no influence).
Figure 2Changes in subjective evaluation of mood and stress in groups A (animal-assisted activities with a dog), B (selected relaxation technique), and C (no influence).
Testing the significance of the difference between groups.
| Observed Parameter | Intergroup Differences |
|---|---|
| Heart rate | |
| Blood pressure, systolic | |
| Blood pressure, diastolic | |
| Mood | |
| Stress |
* Statistically significant difference was observed between groups. A p-value < 0.05 is considered a statistically significant difference.
Figure 3Summary of subjective mood evaluation in groups A (animal-assisted activities with a dog, B (selected relaxation technique), and C (no influence) after performed activities.
Figure 4Categorized histograms showing the distribution of subjective mood values in groups A (animal-assisted activities with dog), B (selected relaxation technique), and C (no influence) after performed activities. 1, best mood; 5, worst mood.
Summary of correlation analysis results—baseline measured value (explanatory variable) and change of measured value score (dependent variable).
| Interaction | Heart Rate | Blood Pressure Systolic | Blood Pressure Diastolic | Mood | Stress |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All groups |
* Statistically significant correlation was observed. A p-value < 0.05 is considered statistically significant.