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Handledares beskrivningar av hundassisterad daglig verksamhet och dess betydelse för personer med funktionsnedsättning

Nyman, Viktoria LU and Holmqvist, Carolin LU (2014) SOPA63 20132
School of Social Work
Abstract
Studies of dog assisted interventions often focus on the effects they have on clients health or situation. In contrast, the aim of this study was to analyze supervisors descriptions of dog assisted interventions in daily activity centers and to discuss how these interventions might affect the client’s situation. The study was performed through six semi-structured interviews using a thematic interview guide created by the authors for this study. The interviewees were supervisors at five different daily activity centers. Activities at the centers entailed direct, specified interactions with dogs such as dog-walks or dog training, or indirect interactions through the day-to-day care and maintenance of a day-care center for dogs. The empirical... (More)
Studies of dog assisted interventions often focus on the effects they have on clients health or situation. In contrast, the aim of this study was to analyze supervisors descriptions of dog assisted interventions in daily activity centers and to discuss how these interventions might affect the client’s situation. The study was performed through six semi-structured interviews using a thematic interview guide created by the authors for this study. The interviewees were supervisors at five different daily activity centers. Activities at the centers entailed direct, specified interactions with dogs such as dog-walks or dog training, or indirect interactions through the day-to-day care and maintenance of a day-care center for dogs. The empirical data was analyzed through manual coding from which three main categories were derived: The supervisors descriptions of the dogs role, the supervisors descriptions of their own role and the supervisors descriptions of the aims of their daily activity centers. The data from these categories were then analyzed further by using established pathogenic and salutogenic theories of health and health promotion. The analysis of the supervisors descriptions revealed both salutogenic and pathogenic components. These components were detected by checking whether the supervisors focused on the clients strengths or limitations. However all supervisors described the opportunity for occupation and interaction with dogs as beneficial for their clients. Our conclusion was that dog assisted daily activity centers can affect the client’s situation through both pathogenic and/or salutogenic health promotion. These centers can enable a normalization process that in turn creates opportunities for the clients to integrate into society. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Nyman, Viktoria LU and Holmqvist, Carolin LU
supervisor
organization
course
SOPA63 20132
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
dog-assisted interventions, health promotion, daily-activity center, disability
language
Swedish
id
4249415
date added to LUP
2014-02-11 09:56:32
date last changed
2014-02-11 09:56:32
@misc{4249415,
  abstract     = {{Studies of dog assisted interventions often focus on the effects they have on clients health or situation. In contrast, the aim of this study was to analyze supervisors descriptions of dog assisted interventions in daily activity centers and to discuss how these interventions might affect the client’s situation. The study was performed through six semi-structured interviews using a thematic interview guide created by the authors for this study. The interviewees were supervisors at five different daily activity centers. Activities at the centers entailed direct, specified interactions with dogs such as dog-walks or dog training, or indirect interactions through the day-to-day care and maintenance of a day-care center for dogs. The empirical data was analyzed through manual coding from which three main categories were derived: The supervisors descriptions of the dogs role, the supervisors descriptions of their own role and the supervisors descriptions of the aims of their daily activity centers. The data from these categories were then analyzed further by using established pathogenic and salutogenic theories of health and health promotion. The analysis of the supervisors descriptions revealed both salutogenic and pathogenic components. These components were detected by checking whether the supervisors focused on the clients strengths or limitations. However all supervisors described the opportunity for occupation and interaction with dogs as beneficial for their clients. Our conclusion was that dog assisted daily activity centers can affect the client’s situation through both pathogenic and/or salutogenic health promotion. These centers can enable a normalization process that in turn creates opportunities for the clients to integrate into society.}},
  author       = {{Nyman, Viktoria and Holmqvist, Carolin}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Handledares beskrivningar av hundassisterad daglig verksamhet och dess betydelse för personer med funktionsnedsättning}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}