Animal and college student emotional relationship: path to pet therapy on campus
Date
2015-04Author
Noden, Brooke N.
Publisher
University of Wisconsin--Stout. Research Services
Advisor(s)
Ferguson, David Christopher
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Many college students experience high levels of stress and/or
homesickness in their first two years of college. When students experience
this emotional state, they may begin to identify as someone who has
anxiety and/or depression. Students who are new to the college environment
often find relief in a form of familiarity. A family pet holds a permanent
bond of perceived unconditional love and affection for their owners.
The purpose of this study is to explore the emotional bond a new college
student has with animals while away from home and to see if animal
interaction while at college helps reduce stress and/or homesickness. This
could ultimately help lower the number of college students who experience
anxiety and/or depression. The methods used for this study were a)
a randomized survey of 102 freshmen and sophomore college students at
UW-Stout and b) a pet therapy session with those who indicated on the
survey they would like to participate. The results showed 92% of freshmen
and sophomore students with pets at home believe interaction with
a pet would help reduce their stress levels and/or homesickness. However,
even 50% of students with no family pet at home indicated that pet
interaction would help lower stress and/or homesickness. The focus group
sessions indicated having animal interaction would help the residents
cope with stress. This research suggests pet therapy would be a beneficial
addition to the Stout campus to help reduce the number of freshmen and
sophomore students who are experiencing stress, homesickness, anxiety
and/or depression.
Subject
pet therapy
college student
depression
stress
animal
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/77520Type
Article
Description
Research article with illustrations and graphs.
Citation
Noden, B. N. (2015). Animal and college student emotional relationship: path to pet therapy on campus. University of Wisconsin-Stout Journal of Student Research, 14, 57-70.