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REHAB GOES TO THE DOGS:. A Practical Approach to Animal Assisted Therapy. Meet Hudy & Oscar. VIDEO. Road from Average Joe to Ambassador of Hope. Canine career change Service Dog Therapy Dog Case Example – Greg Role of Handler in therapy sessions
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REHAB GOES TO THE DOGS: A Practical Approach to Animal Assisted Therapy
Meet Hudy & Oscar VIDEO
Road from Average Joe to Ambassador of Hope • Canine career change • Service Dog • Therapy Dog • Case Example – Greg • Role of Handler in therapy sessions • Facilitates interaction between dog and client • Maintains safety of dog and client • Collaboration with therapist to meet the goal of the session
Why Dogs As a Therapeutic Approach? • Supports key concepts of evidence-based research in the field of neuroscience Saliency (must be meaningful to the client) • Unconditional Love • Companionship • Non-judgmental • Calming, reduces stress, lowers blood pressure • Ice breaker • Reduces depression • Promotes health • Reduces vulnerability
Speech-Language Therapy • Speech-Language Pathologists specialize in the evaluation & treatment of communicative, cognitive &/or swallow needs. Speech-Language Pathologist provide a wide range of services and support for individuals, their families & caregivers from birth to death with such needs.
Typical Speech Therapy Goals May Include: • Speech production • “Dysathria” • “Apraxia” • articulation • voice • prosody (inflection) • resonance • Language (comprehension and expression) • “Aphasia” • phonology (sound structure) • syntax (grammar) • semantics (words) • pragmatics (language use, social aspects of communication)
Typical Speech Therapy Goals May Include Cont: • literacy (reading, writing, spelling) • Cognition • “Cognitive-Linguistic Deficits” • Attention • Memory • Executive functioning • Sequencing & Organization • Problem solving • Reasoning
How Animal-Assisted Therapy Impacts ST Goals – Case Example #1: • 18 y/o female with Acquired Brain Injury w/ residual speech & language deficits • Speech production Command pronunciation • Language Talking to Dog • Pragmatics Developed Scripts Communication Practice using Scripts • Reading Reading out loud to dog Reading a recipe to create Dog treats
Dog Treat Recipe • Frozen Peanut Butter Yogurt Dog Treats • Ingredients• 32 ounces vanilla yogurt• 1 cup peanut butter • Directions1. Melt the peanut butter in a microwave safe bowl2. Combine the yogurt and melted peanut butter 3. Pour the mixture into cupcake papers4. Place in the freezer (www.cesarsway.com 2013)
How Animal-Assisted Therapy Impacts ST Goals – Case Example #2: • 42 y/o male with Traumatic Brain Injury w/ residual cognitive-linguistic deficits • Attention Maintain attention to self & dog during various therapeutic activities • Memory Recall commands Recall stimuli about dogs to share with others Recalling & tracking appointments independently set-up with Handler • Executive Thinking Identify solutions to potential problem situations to maintain safety of dog & self.
Memory Matching • Snuggle Dog brings an object in its mouth to you. • Let’s Go Dog licks your cheek • Kiss Dog lifts its right paw to shake hands. Shake Dog rests its head on your shoulder so you can give it a hug. • Bring Used to encourage dog to walk along with you
Occupational Therapy Occupational therapists “help people across the lifespan participate in the things they want and need to do through the therapeutic use of everyday activities (occupations). Common occupational therapy interventions include helping children with disabilities to participate fully in school and social situations, helping people recovering from injury to regain skills, and providing supports for older adults experiencing physical and cognitive changes.” (www.aota.org 2013)
Typical Occupational Therapy Goals May Include: • Activities of Daily Living (ADL’s) retraining • Use of arms & hands to complete gross & fine motor tasks • Vision & Perception • Cognition & Safety • Modification of environment (home, work, school) • Adaptive Equipment Recommendations • High-Tech Assistive Technology training • Driving Rehabilitation • Note – crossover between disciplines helps with task generalization
How Animal-Assisted Therapy Impacts OT Goals – Case Example #1: 30 y/o male with Traumatic Brain Injury • Pathfinding/Navigation walking the dog through an unfamiliar neighborhood • Visual-spatial awareness safety when crossing streets, maintaining awareness of the dogs safety • Initiation requesting to see dogs on his own time • Exercise playing fetch, giving treats
How Animal-Assisted Therapy Impacts OT Goals – Case Example #2 18 y/o male with Spinal Cord Injury (quadriplegia) • Community Outing to Target Multi-disciplinary • Getting in/out of the van • Going through doors • Operating a power wheelchair while handling a dog in a busy or crowded environment • Getting items off shelves • Carrying things • Picking things up off the floor • Managing purchases (wallet, cash, credit cards)
Physical Therapy Perspectives: Physical therapists help people improve or restore mobility. Therapy dogs help clients become more relaxed and motivated during a PT session because the focus is on something fun. They help take the mind off the task itself, and this usually results in the client being able to do more repetitions of an exercise. Some common PT goals include: • Bed mobility, rolling (have to get up to pet the dog) • Floor transfers (using the dog as a brace for support) • Gait training (split-attention while walking) • Balance (playing fetch) • Wheelchair navigation (safety)
Getting out in the community, interacting with others Realizing they can do things they previously thought impossible Participation in meaningful occupations In the end, the client obtained a service dog Permission obtained by Eileen Bohn, Director of Programs, Helping Paws Inc. (February 2013). Measures of Success:
Resources: • Helping Paws of Minnesota www.helpingpaws.org/ • Intermountain Therapy Animals www.therapyanimals.org/ • Pet Partners (formerly Delta Society) www.petpartners.org/ • American Speech-Language-Hearing Association www.asha.org • American Physical Therapy Association www.apta.org • American Occupational Therapy Association www.aota.org