Very true!Plus many animals are not as well behaved as their owners think they are.
This is the one I would struggle with. My girl suffers from severe separation anxiety. And so do I because she's stressed. If she was allowed to come visit me and then get dragged back off, I don't see how that would benefit either one of us.I wouldn't worry about the dog making anyone sick.
However, I didn't want my dog to visit when i was in the hospital/nursing home for three weeks. I thought it would just confuse and upset her to reunite with me for 20 minutes and then have to separate again. It would have been more heart breaking for me, too, I think.
Mainly the elevator buttons get handled by people transporting cdiff and other iso patients improperly as well as trash people not properly handling them and trash.Very true!
I agree there are pros and cons. I also think there is a much higher risk for a patient to catch flu or ? from a human visitor. Do we ban humans from visiting? Like was done during Covid? Another example of that is allowing a child to visit their mother and newborn infant; done all the time now. Kids are little germ factories. Some illnesses are most contagious before symptoms even appear.
I think it depends on the patient and it depends on the animal. I know of very few diseases that dogs carry that can be transmitted to patients but fleas and other parasites do come to mind. I remember a patient in the OR who we discovered at the end of the surgery had head lice. And @MarciKS has mentioned more than a few times about bed bug rooms in the ER. These come from people.
I can argue both sides of this. In addition, if I were hospitalized, I would not want my dog to come visit for fear of the dog getting sick. Hospitals are dirty places, even with excellent housekeeping. There was a study done years ago where touch samples from various surfaces in a hospital were cultured. Bathrooms, beds, etc. The culture that grew the most was from the elevator button.
"If I were hospitalized, I would not want my dog to come visit for fear of the dog getting sick."Mainly the elevator buttons get handled by people transporting cdiff and other iso patients improperly as well as trash people not properly handling them and trash.
Much as I love my dogs, I would not want them to see them in any medical facility because I regret to say, they are not anywhere near as well trained as my previous guard dogs were (RIP all of them).
I would, however, welcome CERTIFIED service dogs, or goats, or sheep, or cats etc. ā- any creature who has been to school and earned the right to wear the vest that says āserviceā.
I don't think peoples own pets visiting them in hospital or Aged care facilities need to be certified service animals, just ordinary well behaved pets on a lead with a responsible person,
Our dog obedience training club which also has the dog therapy group I mentioned in my last post - the dogs and owners have to be approved as suitable by president of club - which generally means placid, ok in groups of people, not boisterous or jumpy or reactive in unknown situations - but they are not service level trained dogs.