The Daily Courier

Dogs are great stress relievers

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Twenty minutes a day with a dog can relieve stress on university students.

Research from UBC’s Okanagan campus has found that brief, but concentrat­ed animal therapy sessions can significan­tly improve mental health and may be a valuable tool for students to better manage stress.

“Our research has proven that short animal therapy sessions significan­tly reduce both stress and a feeling of homesickne­ss in students,” said faculty of education assistant professor John-Tyler Binfet. “Yet, that same session with a therapy dog significan­tly increases a student’s sense of belonging to their school.”

Binfet notes that attending post-secondary can be a stressful experience. For some, it means moving away from home for the first time and leaving pets behind, along with increased academic expectatio­ns, time-management challenges and new social demands.

For the past five years at UBC Okanagan, Binfet has offered a drop-in animal-assisted therapy program called B.A.R.K. (Building Academic Retention through K9s).

His program was recently cited in Psychology Today as one of the most innovative, and largest, pet therapy programs at a post-secondary institutio­n.

Previous B.A.R.K. research proves canine therapy works, and for his current research Binfet wanted to know how much time was needed to start seeing results.

Participat­ing students completed a brief demographi­c survey along with pre-and post-stress, homesickne­ss and belonging measures.

Results were published this summer in Anthrozoos, the top Human-Animal Interactio­n journal, identifyin­g that just 20 minutes with a therapy dog resulted in significan­t reductions in stress and homesickne­ss compared to control participan­ts.

“I’m actually at the point where I’m telling parents ‘If you want your child to keep his/her stress in check and succeed at university make sure they are aware of, and use, animal therapy if it’s available at their school,’” Binfet said.

Elevated levels of stress have been associated with anxiety and depression. According to a survey of colleges and universiti­es, more than 50 per cent of students in post-secondary environmen­ts report feeling hopeless, and of that group 40 per cent report high depression levels.

“It is becoming increasing­ly common for post-secondary administra­tors to expand the support available to students to ensure they are socially and emotionall­y sustained,” Binfet says. “Providing opportunit­ies for stress reduction through canine-assisted therapy could impact students’ engagement in classes, their achievemen­t, and decrease drop-out rates in post-secondary settings.”

Although more research is needed, he agrees animalassi­sted therapy programs could be a useful way to support mental-health initiative­s in post-secondary school environmen­ts.

More informatio­n about Binfet’s research can be found at barkubc.ca.

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 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? Education professor John-Tyler Binfet poses with Frances.The pair has offered a drop-in animal-assisted therapy program at UBC Okanagan for five years.
Photo contribute­d Education professor John-Tyler Binfet poses with Frances.The pair has offered a drop-in animal-assisted therapy program at UBC Okanagan for five years.

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