The Healing Power of the Human–Animal Bond: A Brief History of Animal-Assisted Therapy

Host Dr. Annie Petersen weaves her childhood bond with her dog Tammy and observations of people softening around animals at a zoo with a historical overview of animal-assisted interventions. She traces evidence from the ninth century and ancient Greek horse-based healing through 1600s physicians and medieval Belgium programs rehabilitating people and pets together, then highlights the York Retreat’s 1796 “moral treatment,” Florence Nightingale’s 1859 endorsement of small pets for the sick, Freud’s use of his dog Jofi in sessions, and Boris Levinson’s 1961 “My Dog as a Co-Therapist.” She describes WWII convalescent hospital dog visits, the founding of Therapy Dogs International (1976) and the Delta Foundation/Pet Partners (1977), and research showing reduced cortisol, increased oxytocin, and lower heart rate and blood pressure. The episode surveys modern applications in hospitals, equine programs, prisons, schools, disaster response, workplaces, campuses, and senior living, emphasizing that healing can come simply from being present with an animal.

00:00 Welcome to the Show

00:40 Backyard Bond Begins

02:43 Zoo Job Awakening

04:24 Ancient Roots of Healing

06:22 Early Medical Adoption

08:40 York Retreat Breakthrough

09:58 Nightingale and Freud

12:35 Levinson Makes It Real

14:44 War and Hospital Dogs

15:56 Modern Organizations Rise

18:07 Science Proves the Bond

19:10 Back to the Backyard

22:09 Programs Around the World

26:27 Everyday Impact Today

27:29 Final Takeaway and Thanks

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