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Horse-assisted Intervention and Heart Rate Variability in Participants Under Stressful Conditions
In this study, the effects of an animal-assisted intervention on people with increased stress levels are investigated. The data collected will be compared with those of participants with high stress levels but without animal-assisted intervention (participants only observe nature) and with a control group consisting of people without stress exposure. The study will be performed in the following setting: Questionnaire examination on chronic stress, questionnaire on current well-being and heart rate variability (HRV) measurement before the horse-assisted intervention, one HRV measurement and one questionnaire examination (POMS) on current well-being after the horse-assisted intervention, one questionnaire (POMS) on current well-being 5 days after the horse-assisted intervention.
The early recognition of chronic stressors, which are often neglected by those affected until physical symptoms appear, is of essential importance. In addition to psychopharmacological therapy modalities, complementary methods such as animal-assisted intervention should also be considered in order to expand the therapeutic spectrum and thus prevent stress-associated consequential harms as early as possible. Stress has gained importance in recent years not only in the medical context, but also due to its economic relevance. Chronic stress in particular leads to numerous medically relevant secondary diseases and to increased sick leaves and even permanent incapacity to work. One possible intervention to reduce stress could be animal-assisted intervention. Primary hypothesis: The use of animal-assisted intervention in people diagnosed with chronic stressful situations will lead to measurable increases in heart rate variability. Secondary hypothesis: The use of animal-assisted intervention in people diagnosed with chronic stressful situations leads to improved well-being (target parameter: POMS questionnaire)
Age
18 - 80 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Medical University of Graz
Graz, Styria, Austria
Start Date
May 1, 2026
Primary Completion Date
January 1, 2028
Completion Date
January 1, 2028
Last Updated
September 29, 2025
123
ESTIMATED participants
animal-assisted intervention
BEHAVIORAL
watching the countryside
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Medical University of Graz
NCT07101458
NCT06898658
Data Source & Attribution
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