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Citation: Kiesewetter, Jan and Herbach, Nadja and Landes, Iris and Mayer, Julia and Elgner, Verena and Orle, Karin and Grunow, Alexandra and Langkau, Rovena and Gratzer, Christine and Jansson, Annette F.: Dog assisted education in children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain in Germany. 2023. Open Data LMU. 10.5282/ubm/data.386

Dog assisted education in children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain in Germany
Dog assisted education in children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain in Germany

Objectives: Animal assisted intervention is an increasingly accepted tool to improve human well-being. The present study was performed to assess whether dog assisted education has a positive effect on children suffering from rheumatic disorders with pain and adolescents with chronic pain syndrome. Design: Two groups of juvenile patients were recruited: 7-17-year-old children in children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain syndromes. Overall, n=26 participated in the intervention, and n=29 in the control group. Setting: The intervention group met once a month, 12 times overall, for working with man trailing dogs in various locations. Main outcome measures: The influence of dog assisted education on quality of life (PedsQLTM Scoring Algorithm), pain intensity, perception, coping (Paediatric Pain Coping Inventory-Revised), and state anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory) was assessed. Results: The quality of life increased significantly in the investigated period, but for both, the intervention and the control group. The state anxiety of children was lower after the dog assisted education than before. After the dog training sessions, state anxiety was 18% to 30% lower than before the intervention. Some participants noted subjectively improved pain coping and changes in pain perception, which were not found in the data. Conclusion: Our results indicate that for children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain syndromes dog assisted education (1) might lead to an increase of the quality of life (2) leads to decreased state anxiety from pre to post intervention and (3) does not influence pain perception, frequency and intensity.

animal assisted intervention, dog assisted education, chronic pain, rheumatic diseases, children, adolescents
Kiesewetter, Jan
Herbach, Nadja
Landes, Iris
Mayer, Julia
Elgner, Verena
Orle, Karin
Grunow, Alexandra
Langkau, Rovena
Gratzer, Christine
Jansson, Annette F.
2023

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DOI: 10.5282/ubm/data.386

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Abstract

Objectives: Animal assisted intervention is an increasingly accepted tool to improve human well-being. The present study was performed to assess whether dog assisted education has a positive effect on children suffering from rheumatic disorders with pain and adolescents with chronic pain syndrome. Design: Two groups of juvenile patients were recruited: 7-17-year-old children in children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain syndromes. Overall, n=26 participated in the intervention, and n=29 in the control group. Setting: The intervention group met once a month, 12 times overall, for working with man trailing dogs in various locations. Main outcome measures: The influence of dog assisted education on quality of life (PedsQLTM Scoring Algorithm), pain intensity, perception, coping (Paediatric Pain Coping Inventory-Revised), and state anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory) was assessed. Results: The quality of life increased significantly in the investigated period, but for both, the intervention and the control group. The state anxiety of children was lower after the dog assisted education than before. After the dog training sessions, state anxiety was 18% to 30% lower than before the intervention. Some participants noted subjectively improved pain coping and changes in pain perception, which were not found in the data. Conclusion: Our results indicate that for children with rheumatic diseases and adolescents with chronic pain syndromes dog assisted education (1) might lead to an increase of the quality of life (2) leads to decreased state anxiety from pre to post intervention and (3) does not influence pain perception, frequency and intensity.

Keywords

animal assisted intervention, dog assisted education, chronic pain, rheumatic diseases, children, adolescents

Item Type:Data
Contact Person:Kiesewetter, Jan and Jannsson, Annette
E-Mail of Contact:annette.jansson at med.lmu.de
Subjects:Faculty of Medicine
Dewey Decimal Classification:600 Technology, Medicine > 610 Medical sciences and medicine
ID Code:386
Deposited By: Dr. Jan Kiesewetter
Deposited On:20. Jun 2023 13:01
Last Modified:20. Jun 2023 13:03

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