Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens

Guinea pigs are used as Animal Assisted Interventions (AAI) to people with different disabilities and are often used in healthcare environments. There are studies made that highlight guinea pigs as AAI for children with autism and the results show that there are plenty of positive effects for the ch...

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Main Author: Johansson, Jennifer
Format: M2
Language:Swedish
Inglés
Published: SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2020
Subjects:
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author Johansson, Jennifer
author_browse Johansson, Jennifer
author_facet Johansson, Jennifer
author_sort Johansson, Jennifer
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Guinea pigs are used as Animal Assisted Interventions (AAI) to people with different disabilities and are often used in healthcare environments. There are studies made that highlight guinea pigs as AAI for children with autism and the results show that there are plenty of positive effects for the children, but there are not a lot of studies on the effects for the animals. There are studies that have come to the conclusion that dogs show positive effects on humans when used in AAI. This study is made as a literature study that aimed to answer the following questions: 1) Could Guinea pigs be used as animal assisted interventions for people with dementia? 2) Are guinea pigs’ natural behaviours catered to when being used as animal assisted interventions to people with dementia? 3) Is there anything to suggest that people with dementia get positive or negative effects of having guinea pigs as animal assisted interventions? The information was collected from different articles, books and scientific studies from Primo (SLU-university library search engine), PubMed and Google Scholar. The results show that guinea pigs are social animals that have been domesticated by humans to have more social interactions and vocalisations that make them the pets they are today. Used in AAI guinea pigs have positive effects on children with autism, such as the children got less aggressive, more social towards other children and calmer. In some studies with guinea pigs in AAI, the results have shown that the guinea pigs’ natural behaviours are not met, as they are stressed by being restrained, however if these are taken into account AAI can provide as a kind of enrichment for the guinea pigs. However, there are not any studies on guinea pigs and dementia. To conclude, there need to be more research on guinea pigs’ effect on people with dementia. Also, there is need for more information on the effects on the animals used in animal assisted interventions.
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id RepoSLU16116
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language swe
Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
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spelling RepoSLU161162020-10-06T01:05:29Z Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens Guinea-pigs (Cavia) as Animal Assisted Interventions (AAI) to elderly people with dementia Johansson, Jennifer Guinea pig animal assisted intervention dementia behaviour Guinea pigs are used as Animal Assisted Interventions (AAI) to people with different disabilities and are often used in healthcare environments. There are studies made that highlight guinea pigs as AAI for children with autism and the results show that there are plenty of positive effects for the children, but there are not a lot of studies on the effects for the animals. There are studies that have come to the conclusion that dogs show positive effects on humans when used in AAI. This study is made as a literature study that aimed to answer the following questions: 1) Could Guinea pigs be used as animal assisted interventions for people with dementia? 2) Are guinea pigs’ natural behaviours catered to when being used as animal assisted interventions to people with dementia? 3) Is there anything to suggest that people with dementia get positive or negative effects of having guinea pigs as animal assisted interventions? The information was collected from different articles, books and scientific studies from Primo (SLU-university library search engine), PubMed and Google Scholar. The results show that guinea pigs are social animals that have been domesticated by humans to have more social interactions and vocalisations that make them the pets they are today. Used in AAI guinea pigs have positive effects on children with autism, such as the children got less aggressive, more social towards other children and calmer. In some studies with guinea pigs in AAI, the results have shown that the guinea pigs’ natural behaviours are not met, as they are stressed by being restrained, however if these are taken into account AAI can provide as a kind of enrichment for the guinea pigs. However, there are not any studies on guinea pigs and dementia. To conclude, there need to be more research on guinea pigs’ effect on people with dementia. Also, there is need for more information on the effects on the animals used in animal assisted interventions. SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2020 M2 swe eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16116/
spellingShingle Guinea pig
animal assisted intervention
dementia
behaviour
Johansson, Jennifer
Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title_full Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title_fullStr Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title_full_unstemmed Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title_short Marsvin (Cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
title_sort marsvin (cavia) som djurunderstödda insatser till äldre människor med demens
topic Guinea pig
animal assisted intervention
dementia
behaviour