Title: Guidelines for pet therapy
1- Â Guidelines for pet therapy
- in long-term care
Sandi Lefebvre DVM, PhD American
Veterinary Medical Association
2Protocol
- Understand whats at stake
- Identify potential problems
- Identify potential solutions
- Take-home message
-
3Protocol
- Understand whats at stake
- Identify potential problems
- Identify potential solutions
- Take-home message
-
4What do I mean by pet therapy?
- Any intervention that intentionally includes or
incorporates animals as part of a therapeutic or
ameliorative process or milieu. (Kruger
Serpell, 2006)
5What are the benefits?
- Diversion from treatments and pain
- Nonjudgmental affection
- ? anxiety
- ? stress
- ? activity
6Where can therapy dogs come from?
of Ontario hospitals
(Lefebvre et al, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol
200627754-8)
7Protocol
- Understand whats at stake
- Identify potential problems
- Identify potential solutions
- Take-home message
-
8What are some potential risks?
9What can get transmitted?
Animals can be carrying pathogens without
showing clinical signs
- Traditional zoonotic pathogens
- Salmonella
- Gastrointestinal parasites
- Emerging zoonotic pathogens
- MRSA
- C. difficile?
- Nonzoonotic pathogens
- Influenza? Norovirus?
10Issues with healthy animals
Prevalence of potentially zoonotic pathogens in
HEALTHY, vaccinated visitation dogs in Ontario
(n102)
of dogs testing positive
Pathogens
11If pets dont bring it in, they can still carry
it out
- Specific evidence
- Dogs that visit LTC facilities are
- 6x as likely to acquire MRSA than dogs that dont
- 2x as likely to get C. difficile
12Do we know how dogs pick up pathogens?
- MRSA
- Licking ? 13x as likely (p 0.002)
- Fed treats by patients ? 12 times as likely
(p 0.005) - No association with
- Coprophagia
- Drinking from toilets
- Sitting on beds
13Do we know how dogs pick up pathogens?
- C. difficile
- Licking ? 3x as likely (p 0.020)
- Sitting on beds ? 3x as likely (p 0.032)
- No increased risk with
- Coprophagia
- Drinking from toilets
- Being fed treats
14Theres more
- Specific evidence
- Dogs that eat raw diets are 20x as likely to
shed Salmonella or multidrug-resistant E. coli
than dogs that dont - Dogs can acquire MRSA on their fur or C.
difficile on their paws during visits
15How else can pathogens spread?
- Observation of 26 pet therapy visits
- Neither healthcare workers nor patients practice
hand hygiene after handling dogs - Handlers very rarely practice hand hygiene
between patients
16Theres more
- Some opportunities for improvement in HCFs
- Appears to be a disconnect between what hospitals
believe is going on and what actually happens
- Poor opportunities for contact tracing Only
8/12 hospitals and 4/14 LTCs required signing in
17Protocol
- Understand whats at stake
- Identify potential problems
- Identify potential solutions
- Take-home message
-
18Challenges to designing standard guidelines
- Limited information available to determine how
real the risks are - Different geographic regions (or facilities) mean
different risks for different pathogens - Different facilities have patients of varying
immune status, mobility, degree of interaction
with other patients.
19Challenges to implementing guidelines in LTCs
- Patients may not be confined to rooms
- Facilities may be understaffed
- Animals may visit many wards with different
patient demographics - May be more difficult to determine sources of
infections
201 Practice hand hygiene
- Patients
- Healthcare workers (ALL!)
- BEFORE and AFTER handling animals
- Dog handlers
- In accordance with facilitys policies
for staff/volunteers
212 Have facility management of programs
- Develop a written policy for animal visits
- Designate one individual responsible for keeping
track of visits (Animal Visit Liaison)
223 Specify suitable animals
- Keep out
- Freelance animals
- Limited screening (if any)
- Handlers are rarely trained
- Shelter animals
- Pathogen-rich environment
- Temperament potentially unpredictable
- Unknown histories (Ont Dis Surveil Rep 1986)
233 Specify suitable animals
- Keep out
- High risk species
- Farm animals (Steinmuller et al, 2006)
- Reptiles amphibians (Yamauchi et al,
1984) (www.cdc.gov/healthypets/child.htm) - Animals recently domesticated
- Hedgehogs (Riley Chomel, 2005)
- Prairie dogs (Kile et al, 2005)
- Wild animal crosses
- Animals from the wild
24Some species are riskier than others
Novelty should not guide decisions
253 Specify suitable animals
- Allow both official program animals and patients
animals - For patients animals
- Household pets only
- No age restriction
- Visit patient only
263 Specify suitable animals
- For program animals
- Must be part of formal program
- Require temperament testing
27Require temperament testing
- By qualified evaluator
- Encounter challenges typical of facility visited
- Reevaluation?
- Negative behaviour
- Change in health
- Prolonged absence
- Every 3 yrs?
283 Specify suitable animals
- For program animals
- Must be part of formal program
- Require temperament testing
- Specify minimum age
- Specify suitable species
293 Specifying suitable animals
- For all animals
- Legally required vaccines (rabies)
- Healthy on day of visit
- No raw meat within 90 days
- For program animals
- Health evaluation at least once/yr
- Defer to veterinarian for other needs
304 Ensure handlers are trained and managed
appropriately
- Require that handlers of patients animals be
escorted to patient - Require that handlers of program animals
- Be trained
- Comply with facility IPC
protocols for volunteers - Be in control of animal at all
times - NO EATING!!
315 Ensure animals are prepared for visits
- Require that handlers ensure
- Proper grooming
- No fleas/ticks
- Clean leash/carrier
- Either on leash at all
times or in carrier between
rooms
326 Ensure appropriate contact
- Prevent program animals from entering ICUs or
isolation - Have handlers prevent contact of animals with
sites of invasive devices or open wounds
336 Ensure appropriate contact
- Require that handlers
- Prevent animals from licking
- Deter shaking of paws
- Use barrier methods when placing animals on beds
- Limit visits to 1 hour maximum
347 Monitor whos coming in
- One person responsible for knowing (a.k.a. Animal
Visit Liaison) - Record-keeping ? contact tracing
- Reporting system for problems
35Protocol
- Understand whats at stake
- Identify potential problems
- Identify potential solutions
- Take-home message
-
36Take-home message
- Pet therapy is good for patients
- We dont know if it can make patients sick
- I suspect it does make some pets sick
- Recommendations should minimize most risks to
both parties - Keeping records will create extra work, but will
be worth it!