加强Zooeyia:了解患有共病药物使用和创伤后应激障碍的退伍军人与他们的服务犬之间的人与动物联系

L. Williamson, C. Dell, D. Chalmers, M. Cruz, P. de Groot
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引用次数: 4

摘要

Zooeyia包括与伴侣动物的互动和关系可能给人类健康带来的潜在好处。这些潜在的好处被分为四个部分来描述它们可能发生的方式:宠物作为社会资本的建设者,减少伤害的代理人,健康行为改变的激励因素,以及治疗计划的积极参与者。这个结构已经被用来检查人与动物的联系(HAB)和理解动物辅助干预。然而,它并没有被有意地应用于有创伤后应激障碍和共病物质使用与服务犬(SD)配对的退伍军人的背景下。在一项探索性的、以患者为导向的时间序列研究设计中,退伍军人与SDs团队通过加拿大国家整体培训计划,对收集的数据采用了定性分析方法。退伍军人sd患者的经历中出现了所有四个组成部分;SDs是社会资本的建设者、减少伤害的推动者、健康行为改变的激励者和治疗计划的积极参与者。虽然与sd一起工作的退伍军人报告了许多好处,但这对夫妇也经历了特殊的复杂挑战,超出了对家庭宠物的预期担忧。在本研究中,退伍军人与他们的SDs之间的人与动物关系,以及随后不断增长的联系,是加强zooeyia的关键组成部分和步骤。对zooeyia的分析扩展了我们对sd如何支持退伍军人健康的理解,包括更好地管理创伤后应激障碍和问题物质使用。由于有害环境影响是相互的,这一分析也促使合一健康认识到并接受对动物福利的关注。
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Strengthening Zooeyia: Understanding the Human-Animal Bond between Veterans Living with Comorbid Substance Use and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and their Service Dogs
Zooeyia includes the potential benefits that interactions and relationships with companion animals can bring to human health. These potential benefits have been grouped into four components to describe the means through which they may occur: pets as builders of social capital, agents of harm reduction, motivators for health behavior change, and active participants in treatment plans. This construct has been used to examine the human-animal bond (HAB) and understand animal-assisted interventions. It has not, however, been intentionally applied within the context of military Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder and comorbid substance use paired with Service Dogs (SD). A qualitative approach to analysis using zooeyia was applied to data collected during an exploratory patient-oriented, time-series research design with Veterans teamed with SDs through a national holistic Canadian training program. All four components of zooeyia were present in the experiences of Veterans with SDs; SDs were builders of social capital, agents of harm reduction, motivators for health behavior change, and active participants in treatment plans. While Veterans working with SDs reported many benefits, the pairs also experienced specific complex challenges, beyond the expected concerns for a household pet. The human-animal relationship between Veterans in this study and their SDs, and the subsequent growing bond, is a key contributing component and step to the strengthening of zooeyia. This analysis of zooeyia extends our understanding of how SDs support veterans’ health, including better management of PTSD and problematic substance use. Because the HAB is reciprocal, this analysis also challenges One Health to recognize and embrace concerns for animal welfare.
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