There’s a reason people light up when a dog enters the room. Something in us responds to animals—their presence, their unconditional acceptance, their simple way of being. This response isn’t just emotional; it’s physiological. Animals genuinely affect our stress hormones, blood pressure, and brain chemistry.
Animal-assisted therapy formalizes this healing connection, while pet ownership offers ongoing mental health benefits. Understanding how animals support mental health can help you harness this ancient bond for your own wellbeing.
Types of Animal-Assisted Interventions
Understanding the categories.
Animal-Assisted Therapy (AAT)
Professional treatment:
- Goal-directed intervention
- Part of treatment plan
- Licensed therapist involved
- Documented progress
- Trained therapy animal
Animal-Assisted Activities (AAA)
Less formal:
- Providing comfort and recreation
- Visiting programs
- No specific treatment goals
- General wellbeing focus
- Less structured
Emotional Support Animals (ESAs)
Personal support:
- Provide comfort to owner
- Prescribed by mental health professional
- Housing protections
- Different from service animals
- Personal companionship
Service Animals
Task-trained:
- Trained to perform specific tasks
- Psychiatric service dogs
- Legal protections
- Intensive training
- Functional assistance
Pet Ownership
General benefits:
- Owning a pet yourself
- Ongoing companionship
- Daily interaction
- Responsibility and routine
- Personal animal bond
How Animals Help
Mechanisms of benefit.
Stress Reduction
Physiological calm:
- Cortisol levels decrease
- Blood pressure drops
- Heart rate slows
- Nervous system calms
- Measurable stress reduction
Oxytocin Release
Bonding hormone:
- Interacting with animals releases oxytocin
- Same hormone as human bonding
- Feel-good effects
- Trust and connection
- Chemical bonding
Unconditional Acceptance
Non-judgmental presence:
- Animals don’t judge
- Acceptance regardless of state
- No shame
- Just present with you
- Unconditional positive regard
Social Facilitation
Connection with others:
- Pets help social interaction
- Conversation starters
- Community connection
- Reduced isolation
- Social catalyst
Physical Activity
Movement encouraged:
- Dogs need walks
- Play and activity
- Exercise benefits
- Movement motivation
- Physical engagement
Routine and Purpose
Structure provided:
- Animals need care
- Daily routine required
- Purpose and responsibility
- Gets you out of bed
- Structured days
Grounding and Present Moment
Mindfulness promotion:
- Animals are present-focused
- Encourage being in the now
- Grounding presence
- Mindfulness through interaction
- Present-moment awareness
Mental Health Benefits
What research shows.
Depression
Mood improvement:
- Reduced depressive symptoms
- Companionship combats loneliness
- Purpose and routine
- Unconditional love
- Depression support
Anxiety
Calming effects:
- Reduced anxiety symptoms
- Grounding presence
- Stress reduction
- Comfort in distress
- Anxiety relief
PTSD
Trauma support:
- Service dogs for PTSD
- Nightmare interruption
- Hypervigilance reduction
- Grounding and calming
- Trauma recovery support
Loneliness
Companionship:
- Combat isolation
- Always someone there
- Connection and relationship
- Especially for those living alone
- Loneliness reduction
Autism Spectrum
Social support:
- Social skills practice
- Non-judgmental interaction
- Calming presence
- Communication bridge
- ASD support
Dementia
Cognitive support:
- Engagement and stimulation
- Reduced agitation
- Comfort and connection
- Quality of life
- Dementia care
Children and Adolescents
Youth benefits:
- Emotional support
- Reading programs with dogs
- Therapy for trauma
- Social skills
- Child mental health
Animal-Assisted Therapy in Practice
What it looks like.
The Setting
Where it happens:
- Therapist’s office
- Hospitals and clinics
- Schools
- Nursing homes
- Various settings
The Team
Who’s involved:
- Licensed therapist or healthcare provider
- Trained therapy animal
- Handler (may be therapist or separate)
- Client
- Team approach
What Happens
Session activities:
- Animal present during therapy
- Incorporated into treatment
- Petting, walking, grooming
- Processing with animal present
- Integrated treatment
Types of Animals
Various species:
- Dogs most common
- Horses (equine therapy)
- Cats
- Small animals (rabbits, guinea pigs)
- Farm animals
- Various options
Training and Certification
Standards:
- Therapy animals specially trained
- Handler training
- Certification through organizations
- Temperament requirements
- Quality control
Equine-Assisted Therapy
Horses as healers.
What It Is
Horse-based therapy:
- Therapy involving horses
- Activities with horses
- Mounted or unmounted
- Therapeutic riding
- Equine facilitated therapy
Unique Benefits
Why horses:
- Large, powerful animals
- Require communication and partnership
- Mirror human emotions
- Immediate feedback
- Unique relationship
Who It Helps
Populations served:
- Trauma survivors
- At-risk youth
- Addiction recovery
- Mental health conditions
- Various applications
Activities
What happens:
- Grooming and caring for horse
- Leading exercises
- Mounted activities
- Partnership building
- Various exercises
Benefits of Pet Ownership
Having your own pet.
Daily Companionship
Always there:
- Consistent presence
- Someone who needs you
- Reduces loneliness
- Daily interaction
- Ongoing relationship
Routine and Structure
Days have shape:
- Feeding times
- Walks and exercise
- Care responsibilities
- Reason to get up
- Daily structure
Physical Activity
Movement:
- Dog walking
- Play
- Activity motivation
- Exercise benefits
- Movement encouragement
Social Connection
Community:
- Meet other pet owners
- Conversation starter
- Community connection
- Park interactions
- Social facilitation
Sense of Purpose
Meaning:
- Responsible for another life
- Needed by something
- Purpose daily
- Reason to keep going
- Meaningful responsibility
Unconditional Love
Pure acceptance:
- Always happy to see you
- No judgment
- Love regardless of your state
- Consistent positive response
- Acceptance
Considerations for Pet Ownership
Important factors.
Responsibility
Real commitment:
- Significant responsibility
- Financial costs
- Time requirements
- Long-term commitment
- Not to be taken lightly
Right Pet for You
Match matters:
- Consider your lifestyle
- Energy level
- Living space
- Time available
- Right match
Mental Health Considerations
Be realistic:
- Pet can help but isn’t treatment
- Care responsibilities can be challenging when struggling
- Have backup plan for crisis
- Don’t adopt impulsively
- Thoughtful decision
Financial Reality
Costs:
- Food and supplies
- Veterinary care
- Pet insurance
- Emergency funds
- Ongoing expense
Housing
Practical considerations:
- Pet-friendly housing
- Space requirements
- Landlord rules
- Future moves
- Living situation
Finding Animal-Assisted Therapy
Accessing professional services.
Talk to Your Therapist
Ask about options:
- Some therapists work with animals
- May offer AAT
- Can refer to programs
- Discuss whether good fit
- Provider discussion
Search Directories
Finding programs:
- Pet Partners
- Therapy Dogs International
- Local programs
- Hospital or clinic services
- Resource directories
Equine Therapy Programs
Horse-specific:
- PATH International
- Local equine therapy centers
- Many areas have programs
- Specialized services
- Equine directories
Questions to Ask
Evaluating programs:
- Training and certification?
- Integration with treatment?
- Safety protocols?
- Experience with your concerns?
- Program evaluation
The Animal Bond
Humans and animals have been companions for tens of thousands of years. This relationship is written into our biology—we respond to animals at a fundamental level. They calm our nervous systems, lift our spirits, and remind us that connection doesn’t require words.
Whether through professional animal-assisted therapy, an emotional support animal, or simply sharing your life with a beloved pet, the human-animal bond offers real mental health benefits. Animals offer something uniquely healing: presence without judgment, connection without complication, and love without condition.
If you’re considering how animals might support your mental health, explore the options. From structured therapy programs to the joy of daily life with a pet, animals can be powerful allies on your healing journey.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re interested in animal-assisted therapy, talk to your mental health provider about appropriate options.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If you'd like support in working through these issues, I'm here to help.
Schedule a Session