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:: Prescription PetsPrescription Pets! For nearly five years Anna Lamb, 36, has struggled with depression. She has sought help from doctors, taken various prescription and over the counter medications, vitamins, and an array of natural remedies all in an effort to control it. What has perhaps been the most welcome and effective antidote to combating her depression, however, came to her by chance in the form of a neglected, seven year old border collie named Mike. A friend of hers who is active in a border collie rescue group convinced Anna to bring Mike home and care for him. "It was hard to live alone," she explains, "hard to come home at times. The only thing facing me was cleaning, the television, the computer, the telephone; no other living being. Mike has changed that. It’s nice to come home and have him waiting for me. One of my classmates even told me a short time after I got Mike that my disposition changed. I seemed happier."
"One interesting finding that we seem to have discovered," Allen points out, "is that people who have the fewest social contacts seem to benefit the most. We think it's because pets substitute for a certain type of social support." An earlier research project she did involved elderly women, who lived alone, with a pet. She found that they tend to be more active and have lower blood pressure than other elderly women living alone with no pets. Because pets demand attention and exercise, quite often this makes their owners more active than their counterparts who do not have pets. Additionally, this increased activity translates into health benefits such as less depression and anxiety, and increased social behavior, which alone has been proven to be beneficial to our health. So, should you rush out to the shelter and adopt Fido to improve your health? That all depends. According to Allen, people who benefit the most from having pets are those who view the animal as a cherished member of the family. You might think of Anna though, who has found a best friend and pseudo therapist in her dog, Mike. "He is very affectionate," Anna says. "Mikie looks at me with his big brown eyes and forces me to get up when I'm depressed. It's hard when he's asking me to save his life and let him outside but he also seems to care about how I feel. Now I have someone to nurture." But the truth is, Anna and Mike both have someone to nurture.
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