pets-and-animals


Therapeutic Dogs

Healing Hounds

Dogs are man's best friend. Always loyal and ever loving, this trait has made canines an integral and common part of what is fast becoming a common mode of therapy in many health care facilities. Not just dogs but animals in general have long been recognized as having a positive effect on the healing process. Dogs, especially, have a calming effect.

These dogs help people cope with emotional issues, offer physical contact, invoke pleasant memories and they divert a person's focus from the problems of the day. That's why they've been used to great success as helpers for those people who are in therapy. Dogs are specially trained for their jobs of helping to take care of the sick, the elderly or the infirm.

Currently there are three types of therapy dogs:

a) Facility Therapy Dogs

b) Animal-Assisted Therapy Dogs

c) Therapeutic Visitation Dogs

The first two types assist physical therapists by meeting the requirements for a person's recovery. They are usually found in hospitals and are permanently assigned there. The most common type of therapeutic dog, however, is the third type.

Therapeutic visitation dogs are ordinary pets whose owners take to hospitals, nursing homes and rehabilitation facilities. These dogs help people who are away from home due to mental or physical illness. These people are usually in a highly stressful or depressing environment and a visit from a therapy dog can always brighten their day and help them deal with their problems.

Through their bright example, these dogs help the people they meet maintain a positive attitude. This positive outlook is important in good health, happiness and staying young. Pets also provide a chance for patients to touch and be touched. This gives the patients a chance to express their need for physical contact, a need that doctors have proven as a very important factor in a patient's psychological health.

This is integral in helping people maintain a better mental standing on their condition. This and the ever-loving nature of dogs make them perfect cures to depression that often plagues many patients and residents of nursing homes and hospitals.

It's very difficult to accurately measure how positive an effect these dogs have on patients. But all you have to do to see that they're doing their job is a happy smile on a patient's face when they're in the company of one of these amazing healing hounds.

 

 
Search This Site

Dog Training

 

 

 

Dog Training


Dog Crates

... good protection. These materials provide them space especially when they are in trouble. They can relax on the crate every time they want to, and unlike other pet accessories, the crates help dogs develop their own habits to the better. Studies have shown that dogs housed on a safe area like what these ... 

Read Full Article  


Bathroom Training For Dogs

... many owners punish them after they have done the toilet in the house. But that is no good, they need to be caught in the act, but you don't need to rub your dog's nose in it like many suggest! The dog needs to learn to trust you not fear you or it will never learn. The first obstacle in potty training ... 

Read Full Article  


Dog Training With A Training Collar Or Choke Collar 1

... ineffective and potentially dangerous. ? Using the collar properly. A training collar should be used as a sharp reminder to the dog, not as punishment. It is important that constant pressure be avoided when using a training collar. ? The weight of the chain and the size of the links on the training collar. ... 

Read Full Article  


Separating The Fact From Fiction In Regards To Spay Or Neutering Your Pet

... away in search of the opposite sex. Dog who are fixed also do not spray (also known as urine marking) to stake their territory because they don't feel the need to do so. My dog would be angry with me if I castrated him. Animals have feelings but they are not as complex as a human being's. Once he or she ... 

Read Full Article  


The Basics Of Training Your Dog

... their owners at a certain time of day and know that meal times occur regularly. Once trained, they will even exhibit certain behaviors to mark these times of day, such as bringing their empty food dish to their master or waiting near the door for their owners return. To us humans, this may seem a dull ... 

Read Full Article