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Clinical Trial Summary

Hospital-based Animal-Assisted visitation programs are important complementary therapies, but concerns with infection control may challenge the sustainability of these programs. Pilot data suggest that a low-cost chlorhexidine-based intervention targeted to the dogs involved in the visitation programs holds high potential to prevent pathogen transmission during sessions. In this study, the following aims will be tested: 1) To identify program-related risk factors for acquisition of hospital-associated pathogens by pediatric patients during animal-assisted intervention (AAI) sessions during an initial run-in phase of no intervention; 2) To determine the effect of chlorhexidine (CHX)-based interventions on acquisition of hospital-associated pathogens and microbial communities by patients during AAI sessions via a multicenter randomized controlled trial; and 3) To determine whether the specific benefits achieved by the visitation program, i.e. reduction in blood pressure, heart rate and self-reported pain and anxiety, are impacted by the interventions.


Clinical Trial Description

Hospital-based Animal-Assisted visitation programs provide an important complementary treatment in holistic patient care and reduce patient stress, pain and anxiety. However, the risk of transmission of pathogens, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a challenge to the sustainability of hospital-based Animal-Assisted visitation programs. Pilot data suggest that a low-cost chlorhexidine-based intervention targeted to the dogs involved in the visitation programs holds high potential to prevent pathogen transmission during sessions. Therefore, child participants will be enrolled who interact with 40 dogs over twelve sessions (four observational, eight where the dog is randomized to intervention or control) at two enrollment centers. The following aims will be tested: 1) To identify program-related risk factors for acquisition of hospital-associated pathogens by pediatric patients during animal-assisted intervention (AAI) sessions during an initial run-in phase of no intervention; 2) To determine the effect of chlorhexidine (CHX)-based interventions on acquisition of hospital-associated pathogens and microbial communities by patients during AAI sessions via a multicenter randomized controlled trial; and 3) To determine whether the specific benefits achieved by the visitation program, i.e. reduction in blood pressure, heart rate and self-reported pain and anxiety, are impacted by the interventions. If findings support the hypothesis that chlorhexidine interventions are effective to prevent pathogen transmission through a multicenter, parallel-arm randomized controlled trial and does not reduce Animal-Assisted visitation program benefits to the children or impact the welfare of the therapy dogs, then this will provide strong evidence on which to base recommendations for infection control guidelines for programs nationally. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04171817
Study type Interventional
Source Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Contact Meghan F Davis, DVM PhD
Phone 410-614-8283
Email mdavis65@jhu.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
Start date May 1, 2023
Completion date December 1, 2025

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