Abstract

Although the benefits of animal assisted therapy for people are well established, the ethical considerations for the welfare and safety of the non-human animals involved are not. Without an accrediting body responsible for creating and overseeing national standards, therapy animal organizations are forced to create their own guidelines, creating inconsistencies within the field. Based on interviews conducted with therapy teams who have worked with Parenting, Prison & Pups (PPP), a parenting program provided to incarcerated jailed women that is integrated with the use of animal-assisted therapy (AAT), this article explores the extent of ethics training offered for AAT teams and will examine how agencies and handlers promote and ensure the safety of canine partners, especially in a correctional setting. The research suggests that specific protocols put forth by individual AAT organizations, which can provide for a national model, can afford for the safety and comfortability of canine partners, especially in a corrections environment, but implies that in order to maintain consistency and increase therapy team professionalism, national standards are a necessity. Guidelines are specifically essential for mental health professionals, who lack guidelines from their own accrediting bodies’ code of ethics, and may incorporate non-human therapy partners into their work settings, without proper supervision.

Highlights

  • The question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being? . . . The time will come when humanity will extend its mantle over everything which breathes

  • Based on interviews conducted with therapy teams who have worked with Parenting, Prison & Pups (PPP), a parenting program provided to incarcerated women, that is integrated with the use of animal-assisted therapy (AAT), this article explores best practices for the inclusion of therapy dogs in correctional settings and will examine how handlers promote and ensure the safety of their canine partners in two different New York jails

  • Previous research on PPP found differences between mothers who completed a parenting course with AAT (i.e., Parenting, Prison & Pups), compared to those who completed the same course without AAT; statistically significant lower rates of parental stress and anxiety, in addition to higher rates of self-esteem and parental knowledge were found among the AAT group

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Summary

Introduction

The question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being? . . . The time will come when humanity will extend its mantle over everything which breathes. Therapy animals are being incorporated more frequently in a vast number of therapeutic interventions. In-prison dog training programs (DTP) and animal-assisted interventions (AAI) have been found to produce positive outcomes similar to AAT programs (Cooke and Farrington 2015; Flynn et al 2020). “a goal oriented, planned and structured therapeutic intervention directed and/or delivered by health, education and human service professionals. AAT is delivered and/or directed by a formally trained professional with expertise within the scope of the professionals’ practice. Animal-assisted activity (AAA), another effective intervention, is similar to AAT, but it is provided for “motivational, educational and recreational purposes” Research finds that both human-animal interactions are very effective in assisting with the healing process and animal interventions have not received as much attention in the mental health literature as warranted, it is as effective as any other reputable or well-known mental health intervention (Nimer and Lundahl 2007)

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