You are here: Home / Theses / Canine-assisted therapy: The impact of service dog partnership on symptoms of PTSD in veterans / About

Canine-assisted therapy: The impact of service dog partnership on symptoms of PTSD in veterans

By Katherine Ankenbauer

View Link (HTM)

Licensed under

Category Theses
Abstract

This literature review will seek to review and analyze the efficacy of Canine-Assisted Therapy as a complementary method for combat veterans suffering symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress .Disorder (PTSD), with a particular focus on those who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and/or Operation New Dawn (ONO). In recent years, many programs, agencies and therapists have more frequently incorporated the use of service dogs into therapy for post-deployment veterans. In past decades, some studies' results were deemed inconclusive by accredited authorities due to their low level of generalizability and lack of quantitative methodology and analysis. However, more recent studies have exposed data that suggests Animal-Assisted Therapy (AAT) utilizing dogs, horses and cats, when used in a complementary manner in conjunction with other more conventional, evidence-based psychotherapies, present the potential for substantially improving the results of therapy, increasing participation and shortening recovery time through impacting the above mentioned areas of physical, psychological, emotional PTSD symptoms, social experiences and levels of support. Therefore, this newer approach holds the promise of bettering PTSD treatment and increasing effectivity by filling in the gaps of traditional therapies currently used by the Veteran Health Administration (VHA) within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) such as Cognitive Behavioral.

Submitter

Marcy Wilhelm-South

Purdue University

Date 2018
Pages 59
Department Social Work
Degree Open Access Senior Honors Thesis
URL https://commons.emich.edu/honors/611/
Language English
University Eastern Michigan University
Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Tags
  1. Animal-assisted activities
  2. Animal-assisted therapies
  3. Dogs
  4. Mammals
  5. open access
  6. Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
  7. veterans
Badges
  1. open access