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Wellness Effects of Animal-assisted Activities With Autism Spectrum Disorder Youth in a Specialized Psychiatric Hospital

Physiological Wellness Effects of Animal-assisted Activities in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder in a Specialized Psychiatric Hospital Program

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03369769
Enrollment
75
Registered
2017-12-12
Start date
2015-08-06
Completion date
2019-03-13
Last updated
2019-05-20

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Child Behavior, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Psychiatric Hospitalization, Veterinary Therapeutics

Brief summary

Background: Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) are at higher risk for developing co-existing mental health conditions and consequently experiencing psychiatric hospitalization, compared to the general pediatric population. However, hospital environments can be exceptionally stressful for this population, given their social-communication deficits, ineffective emotional regulation skills and heightened physiological arousal. While the use of animal-assisted activities (AAA) show potential for various improvements in children with ASD in community settings, these stress-reducing and social-buffering benefits have not yet been studied within a psychiatric hospital setting for youth with ASD. Objectives: Evaluate whether an AAA with canines can lead to reduced physiological arousal and improvements in social-communication as well as aberrant behaviors in children and adolescents diagnosed with ASD in a specialized psychiatric hospital setting. Methods: Participants were recruited from the Neuropsychiatric Special Care (NSC) program's inpatient and/or partial day-treatment program. Prior to study participation, baseline demographic measures were acquired from caregivers and participants' ASD diagnosis was confirmed. Participants experienced two, randomly assigned 35-minute sessions (AAA and Control Condition) with a minimum two-day washout period between groups. Each session included a baseline 20-minute social skills group immediately followed by a 10 minute experimental or control condition. The AAA condition introduced a canine and volunteer handler for free interaction time while the control condition introduced a novel toy and a volunteer for free interaction. Participants' physiological arousal was continuously assessed throughout all conditions via the Empatica E-4 wristbands (Empatica Inc. 2014). All sessions were videotaped for behavioral coding using the Observation of Human Animal Interaction for Research - Modified, v.1.

Detailed description

Background: Children with ASD are at higher risk for developing co-existing mental health conditions and consequently experiencing psychiatric hospitalization, compared to the general pediatric population. However, hospital environments can be exceptionally stressful for this population, given their social-communication deficits, ineffective emotional regulation skills and heightened physiological arousal. While the use of animal-assisted activities (AAA) show potential for various improvements in children with ASD in community settings, these stress-reducing and social-buffering benefits have not yet been studied within a psychiatric hospital setting for youth with ASD. Objectives: Evaluate whether an AAA with canines can lead to reduced physiological arousal and improvements in social-communication as well as aberrant behaviors in children and adolescents diagnosed with ASD in a specialized psychiatric hospital setting. Methods: Participants were recruited from the Neuropsychiatric Special Care (NSC) program's inpatient and/or partial day-treatment program. Prior to study participation, baseline demographic measures were acquired from caregivers and participants' ASD diagnosis was confirmed. Participants experienced two, randomly assigned 35-minute sessions (AAA and Control Condition) with a minimum two-day washout period between groups. Each session included a baseline 20-minute social skills group immediately followed by a 10 minute experimental or control condition. The AAA condition introduced a canine and volunteer handler for free interaction time while the control condition introduced a novel toy and a volunteer for free interaction. Participants' physiological arousal was continuously assessed throughout all conditions via the Empatica E-4 wristbands (Empatica Inc. 2014). All sessions were videotaped for behavioral coding using the Observation of Human Animal Interaction for Research - Modified, v.1.

Interventions

10 minutes interaction with therapy dog and adult handler in small group (2-4 participants).

Sponsors

Human Animal Bond Institute for Research
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Purdue University
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Colorado, Denver
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Masking description

Coders for the videotaped behavioral data collected via the OHAIRE-M tool were blind to specific study objective.

Intervention model description

To investigate the effect of canine animal assisted activities (AAA) on physiological arousal levels in children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (ages 4 to 17 years) in a specialized psychiatric hospital program. It is hypothesized that children with ASD will demonstrate lower physiological arousal in the presence of canines, compared to a non-animal control.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
4 Years to 16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Admitted to a specialized psychiatric unit for children with developmental disabilities * Meeting standard cut-off scores for ASD on the Social Communication Questionnaire Screener (\> 12) and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-2nd Ed * English speaking

Exclusion criteria

* Unwillingness to wear wristband & be videotaped * Allergies or phobias to canines * Inability to attend to and participate in a social group * Prisoner status or ward of the state

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in physiological measurements with the wristband device from baseline through 90 minutes.Baseline; 90 minutesThe Wristband device is worn by the participant for 90 minutes during the day of the experimental condition. Physiological measure of Galvanic skin response, heart rate, heart rate variability will be assessed at baseline through 90 minutes. Collection points during this day includes comparison from baseline, social group, and experimental condition.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Observation of Human Animal Interaction for Research (OHAIRE-modified)Two 10-minute conditions (experimental and control) on two separate days.The Observation of Human-Animal Interaction for Research (OHAIRE) is a timed interval coding system intended to capture the unique interactions between humans and animals. It was originally developed and piloted with children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) interacting with typically-developing peers in a small group school setting with guinea pigs compared to toys.

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026