But with increasing numbers of scientific studies suggesting furry visitors can pick up and perhaps spread pathogens like Clostridium difficile and Salmonella, experts think it's time for evidence-based recommendations on how animal visitation programs should be run.
Canadian and U.S. experts are meeting in Toronto on Tuesday to debate and hopefully approve detailed guidelines aimed at minimizing the infection risks to the patients, the pets and the owners of animals that visit hospitals and nursing homes.
One of the organizers, Dr. Sandra Lefebvre of the Ontario Veterinary College in Guelph, thinks this type of infection control guidance is overdue.
"Therapy dogs and other programs have spread really rapidly, because they are so popular and people love them. And the problem is that we haven't kept on top of the infection control practices," said Lefebvre, a veterinarian and scientist who has conducted key studies looking at what types of bacteria, parasites and other types of bugs therapy animals can pick up and perhaps transmit during their travels.
"We haven't said, 'OK, just a minute here. What are the potential problems? And do we need to do something about that?"'
"We require people who are going into hospital to apply hand sanitizer before they go in, but animals get in without any kind of screening like that. So it makes common sense that we would have to take some preventive measure to help minimize the risks."
A list of recommendations, drafted with help from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control among others, will be debated by participants, who include researchers, animal behaviour experts, representatives of Canadian and American infection control associations and groups that run animal therapy programs.
Meeting organizers support animal visitation programs and are not recommending they be scrapped.
But they said issues up for discussion include restricting the programs to healthy animals that have been tested to see that they have the right temperament to visit hospitals, where they could be subjected to loud noises and approaches from a large number of strangers.
"That's something that may be overlooked when it comes to health risks, that bites and scratches might actually be the biggest risk," said Dr. Scott Weese, a colleague of Lefebvre's and a leading researcher in the study of antibiotic resistant bacteria in companion and farm animals.
Lefebvre has been bitten several times by therapy dogs, including one she was testing for pathogens.
Other areas the guidelines are expected to cover include the recommendation that anyone handling therapy animals sanitize their hands before and after contact, and that animals which are fed a raw meat diet - which carries a high risk of Salmonella infection - be excluded from visitation programs, Lefebvre said. 1