A spoonful of medicine goes down a lot easier if there is a dog or cat
around. Having pets is helpful for women living with HIV/AIDS and
managing their chronic illness, according to a new study from the
Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve
University.
"We think this finding about pets can apply to women managing other
chronic illnesses," said Allison R. Webel, instructor of nursing and
lead author of the article, "The Relationship Between Social Roles and
Self-Management Behavior in Women Living with HIV/AIDS," which appears
in the online journal Women's Health Issues.
Webel set out to better understand how women manage their HIV/AIDS and
stay on track to take their medications, follow doctors' orders and live
healthy lifestyles. She conducted 12 focus groups with 48 women to find
out what they did to stay healthy. The women had an average age of 42,
about 90 percent had children, and more than half were single.
During the focus groups, six predominant social roles emerged that
helped and hindered these women in managing their illness: pet owner,
mother/grandmother, faith believer, advocate, stigmatized patient, and
employee. All roles had a positive impact except stigmatized patient,
which prevented women from revealing their illness and seeking out
appropriate supports.
"Much information is available about the impact of work and family
roles, but little is known about other social roles that women assume,"
Webel said.
Being a pet owner was an important surprise, added Webel, who
collaborated with co-author Patricia Higgins, a professor of nursing at
Case Western Reserve University.
"Pets - primarily dogs - gave these women a sense of support and pleasure," Webel said.
When discussing the effect their pets have on their lives, the women
weighed in. "She's going to be right there when I'm hurting," a cat
owner said. Another said: "Dogs know when you're in a bad mood...she
knows that I'm sick, and everywhere I go, she goes. She wants to protect
me."
The human and animal bond in healing and therapy is being recognized,
Webel said, as more animals are visiting nursing homes to connect to
people with dementia or hospitals to visit children with long hospital
stays.
Being a pet owner is just one social aspect of these women's lives. "We
found the social context in which this self-management happens is
important," Webel said.
Another strong role to emerge was advocate. Participants wanted to give
back and help stop others from engaging in activities that might make
them sick, the researchers report.
While roles as mothers and workers are well documented, "less-defined
social roles also have a positive impact on self-management of their
chronic illness," Webel said.
source
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