Skip to main content

Handbook on Animal-Assisted Therapy

  • 6th Edition - September 20, 2024
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Aubrey H Fine, Aubrey H Fine, Megan Mueller, Zenithson Ng, Taylor Chastain Griffin, Philip Tedeschi
  • Language: English

Handbook on Animal-Assisted Therapy, Sixth Edition continues to be the leading textbook and reference in this field for clinical practitioners. The book provides the evidence… Read more

World Book Day celebration

Where learning shapes lives

Up to 25% off trusted resources that support research, study, and discovery.

Description

Handbook on Animal-Assisted Therapy, Sixth Edition continues to be the leading textbook and reference in this field for clinical practitioners. The book provides the evidence basis for the effectiveness of this treatment, as well as guidelines for how to perform it from the selection of treatment animal to application with patients. This new edition is fully updated and contains 15 new chapters on culture, research, standards, of practice, and more. Organized into four sections, the book explores the conceptualization of the animal-human bond, best practices for AAI professionals, considerations related to animal selection/ training/ welfare, and utilizing AAI in special populations.

The book may serve as a study guide for the Animal Assisted Intervention Specialist Certification Exam.

Key features

  • Summarizes current research on AAT
  • Guides readers how to work with a therapy animal safely and effectively
  • Covers AAT with special populations and for specific disorders
  • Supports study for the Animal-Assisted Intervention Specialist Certification exam
  • Contains 15 new chapters on culture, research, standards of practice, and more

Readership

Clinical practitioners in mental health; Graduate students in clinical psychology; Professional courses in clinical psychology

Table of contents

Section One: The Conceptualization of the Animal-Human Bond: The Foundation for Understanding AAI

1. Understanding our Kinship with Animals: Input for Health Care Professionals Interested in the Human-Animal Bond

2. AAI in Historical Perspectives

3. Conceptualizing AAIs: Honoring our past, understanding our present and building a new future for the field of AAI

4. Understanding the Influence of Culture, Race, Ethnicity, and Identity on Animal-Assisted Interventions

5. The Animal-Human Bond: Health and Wellness

6. The State of Research in AAI

Section Two: Best Practices for AAI Professionals

7. Professional Competencies and Standards of Practice in AAI

8. Incorporating AAI into Psychotherapy: Guidelines and Suggestions for Therapists

9. Application of AAI in Professional Mental Health Settings: An overview of practice considerations

10. The Application of Animal Assisted Interventions in Various Allied Health Professions

Section Three: Considerations Related to Animal Selection, Training, and Welfare

11. What’s love got to do with it? Selecting animals for AA mental health interventions

12. Getting the Right Dog for the Right Job for AAI. Essential Understanding of Dog Behavior and Ethology

13. The role of the Equine in AAI

14. Preparing a Canine for Therapy Dog Work through Training and Relationship-Building

15. Trends in animal welfare research in animal-assisted interventions

16. Our Ethical and Moral Responsibility: Strategies for Ensuring the Welfare of Therapy Animals:

17. Species Specific Welfare Considerations for animals involved in AAI.*Divided into the following sections:

1. Felines

2. Horses

3. Small animals

4. Birds and reptiles

18. Zoonoses in animal-assisted interventions

Section Four: AAI in Special Populations

19. Animals in the Lives of Children

20. Animals in Educational Settings: Research and Practice.

21. The role of Animals for Individuals with Executive Functioning Disorders

22. Companion Animals in Older Adulthood: Engaging and Sustaining the Bond

23. AAI in Special Settings: Hospitals, Colleges, & Correctional Facilities

24. Understanding the Role of Human-Animal Interaction in the Family Context

25. Treating human trauma and depression with the help of animals: Trauma-informed intervention for child maltreatment, adult post-traumatic stress, and depression

26. The Complete Journey: Navigating the Death, Dying & Grief of a Therapy Animal Partner

27. Animal-assisted interventions for military families: A synthesis of the current evidence

28 (Updated and with a few new snapshots) Global Snapshots of Therapy Animal Programs
● N. Pets are Wonderful Support- An Example of Sustainability and Community Partnerships
● N. Prison Based Program- Harmon Canine Prison Program in Northern Israel
● N. Dog’s on Call- The Exemplary Hospital based program at VCU
● N. B.A.R.K. Program: Supporting College Students at UBC
● N. Sensory Integration, Reflexes and Animal Assisted Therapy
● Animal Care at the Center of a Human-Animal interaction program
● AAI and Eating Disorders
● Teacher’s Pet
● Integrating Animals into Neurorehabilitation
● Horses Touch More than Our Ski
● The PATH to Success

29. Final Thoughts: The Editors’ Reflections on the State of AAI: The Unknown Future

30. A Personal Tribute to Animals in Our Lives and the Field of Animal Assisted Interventions: Oh the Places We Have Gone and Will Go!

Product details

  • Edition: 6
  • Latest edition
  • Published: September 25, 2024
  • Language: English

About the editors

AF

Aubrey H Fine

Psychologist Dr. Aubrey Fine is an internationally known expert with close to 50 years of experience in the field of Animal Assisted Therapy (AAT) and the Human Animal Bond. Dr. Fine is a Professor Emeritus at the California State Polytechnic University for over 42 years, during which time he has researched the value of AAT with children and the elderly. In addition, he has integrated the foundations of AAT into his clinical practice, which primarily focuses on the treatment of children with attention, behavioral, adjustment and developmental disorders.
Affiliations and expertise
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, CA, USA

AF

Aubrey H Fine

Psychologist Dr. Aubrey Fine is an internationally known expert with close to 50 years of experience in the field of Animal Assisted Therapy (AAT) and the Human Animal Bond. Dr. Fine is a Professor Emeritus at the California State Polytechnic University for over 42 years, during which time he has researched the value of AAT with children and the elderly. In addition, he has integrated the foundations of AAT into his clinical practice, which primarily focuses on the treatment of children with attention, behavioral, adjustment and developmental disorders.
Affiliations and expertise
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, CA, USA

MM

Megan Mueller

Dr. Megan K. Mueller, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Human-Animal interaction at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University within the Center for Animals and Public Policy. Dr. Mueller is Co-Director of the Tufts Initiative for Human-Animal Interaction and is a senior fellow at the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life at Tufts University. Dr. Mueller is a developmental psychologist, and her research program focuses on assessing the dynamic relationships between people and animals in families and communities. Her work focuses on the psychology of the human-animal bond, and how human-animal interaction can promote thriving for adolescents and their families. Her research has been published in numerous scientific journals and media outlets. Dr. Mueller is a board member of the International Society for Anthrozoology and serves on the Pet Partners Human-Animal Bond Advisory Board.
Affiliations and expertise
Associate Professor, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University, USA

ZN

Zenithson Ng

Dr. Zenithson Ng is a clinical associate professor at the University of Tennessee. He earned his undergraduate degree in animal science from Rutgers University and his veterinary degree from Cornell University; then completed a small animal rotating internship at the ASPCA in NYC, followed by a canine/feline primary care residency combined with a master’s degree in human-animal bond studies at Virginia Tech. His clinical interests include small animal behavior, dentistry, preventive medicine, and management of chronic disease. His research and teaching interests span all aspects of the human-animal bond including the effect of human-animal interaction on both humans and animals, the veterinary-client relationship, and stress reduction in both veterinary and animal-assisted intervention settings.
Affiliations and expertise
Associate Professor, University of Tennessee, USA

TG

Taylor Chastain Griffin

Dr. Taylor Chastain Griffin is the Executive Director of The Association of Animal-Assisted Intervention Professionals and is the National Director of Animal-Assisted Interventions (AAI) Advancement at Pet Partners. In these roles, she oversees the organizations’ empirical research collaborations and works with other field leaders to motivate standardization and professionalization of the intervention. With a background as a dog trainer, therapy dog handler, and mental health counselor, Dr. Chastain Griffin came to her position with a variety of experiences that inform her work. Having completed her doctorate in research psychology with a focus on the human-animal bond, she works to formally integrate expertise in the field of human services with best practices while working with therapy animals.
Affiliations and expertise
Ph.D.

PT

Philip Tedeschi

Philip Tedeschi is the Director Emeritus and Founder of the Institute for Human-Animal Connection, a licensed clinical social worker, a clinical professor at the Graduate School of Social Work and an affiliated faculty with the University of Denver’s Animal Law Program. He teaches in the Human- Animal-Environmental Interaction Certificate for Master of Social Work students, examining the intricate relationship between people, domestic and wild animals, and the natural world. Tedeschi’s research, scholarship, teaching, and community practice work have focused on issues of social and interspecies justice, global perspectives of human-animal interactions, conservation social work and human ecology. He specializes in the bio-affiliative connection between people and animals, the health promoting potential of human-animal and nature interaction, trauma informed care and causes of maltreatment to people and other non-human animals.
Affiliations and expertise
Director Emeritus, Institute for Human-Animal Connection, USA

View book on ScienceDirect

Read Handbook on Animal-Assisted Therapy on ScienceDirect