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Sure it’s cute but does it work?
The Dolphin Assisted Therapy industry has flourished in recent decades under the guise that interactions with dolphins will heal ill and disabled people. It sounds nice. And uber fluffy. I mean, c’mon, who doesn’t want to pet a dolphin and become BFF with one and swim through the deep blue sea hugging its fin and grow up to become a marine world animal trainer with a really really perky pony tail? I did, since grade two.
According to the Dolphin Assisted Therapy website “Dolphin Assisted Therapy is not a miracle” but a “feeling of a joy and harmony during the treatment sessions in the hearts of children, their parents and support team is a guaranteed outcome.”
According to the WDCS and scientists, the only thing therapeutic dolphin petting does is stress out dolphins and increase their captive numbers. Just earlier this month some 28 dolphins were captured in the Solomon Islands and shipped over to Dubai where they are believed to be employed as schmealers (as in healer, schmealer).
I think Big Willy’s producers just got fodder for a golden sequel. Can’t you see it? Dolphin loving kid has magical experience with dolphin but it’s SO magical that he stages dolphin uprising in all those dolphinarium’s in Florida and the Mediterranean. Or he injects them with the same virus that turns Britain into an aggro zombie nation in ‘28 Days Later’ which would mark the beginning of the dolphin gore film genre. Dolphins with fangs and wild eyes exacting revenge on the measly bipeds… can’t you see it now??

i feel that this is a good way for disabled people to have a bit of enjoyment in their life, it is an inspiring way to make young people happy. just imagine you being disabled or your son or daughter. this is a good way to help improve strength and abilities to help them maintain a better life. the dolphins also love it, if they did not they would not even bother coming up to the human if they where unhappy. they are very friendly and happy creatures.
As the founding Director of the Cetacean Studies Institute, founded in 1996, and long-time researcher into the effectiveness of Dolphin-Assisted Therapy (DAT), I feel compelled to comment.
The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS) has recently chosen to start a campaign against DAT. Using a recently published paper, they have claimed to have scientific evidence that DAT is ineffective.
There are a few problems with this…
The review of DAT research cited by WDCS written by Marino and Lilienfeld has many errors in it. Titled “Dolphin-Assisted Therapy: More Flawed Data, more flawed conclusions”, it is itself littered with flaws.
Without any clear definition of what Dolphin-Assisted Therapy is, the Marino-Lilienfeld paper makes unsupported accusations against well-developed and well-proven therapeutic programs of therapy that include dolphins. It does not adequately differentiate between real DAT programs and “swim-with-dolphins” programs.
The paper suggests, for instance, that any person swimming with dolphins is undertaking some kind of intentional therapy. It cites research having to do with injuries sustained by people in commercial swim programs, and only one side of the debate about whether diseases can be transmitted between dolphins and humans as part of its basis for suggesting that DAT is an “unsubstantiated intervention”.
Here is the final conclusion in this paper:
“At the very least, we believe that DAT practitioners should be required
to inform parents and, when relevant, participants, of the absence of evidence for DAT’s enduring effects on psychological symptoms. Only then can consumers of DAT make adequately informed decisions regarding the costs and benefits of this unsubstantiated intervention.”
Yes, DAT is, so far, unsubstantiated by the research cited by Marino et al.. Does this mean that it is ineffective?
The main issue here is whether DAT has a positive and long-lasting effect on the lives of patients and their families. Instead of asking this question, which would necessitate actual research, extensive interviews, arranging for standardized measuring instruments to be deployed to discover and document changes, and a host of other expensive and time consuming research, Marino and Lilienfeld have taken the safe arm-chair route. They have reviewed the very few research papers ever published to see if they can stand up to an extremely rigorous analysis of their scientific validity.
Reviewing the validity of research is not the same as doing research.
Where Marino and Lilienfeld find flaws in the published research, we all gain by knowing that the conclusions reached in the original research may be tainted. This does not condemn DAT per se, but does show how the research could have been done better.
In our many years of studying DAT, visiting facilities, interviewing therapists, patients, family members, trainers, doctors, medical technicians, as well as filming dozens of sessions, collecting patient stories, and operating a small Wellness Program ourselves, we have seen many wonderful results.
Literally thousands of families have had their entire family history changed for the better through the effectiveness of good DAT programs.
To date no one has created an accurate definition of Dolphin-Assisted Therapy. However, just as the Supreme Court Justice said, “I know it when I see it”, one can visit some of the DAT programs around the world to see what it is. We recommend Island Dolphin Care, in Key Largo, Florida (www.islanddolphincare.org) as the most professional, effective, and long term program, under trained medical professionals, run as a non-profit organization, as the model for high standards.
The results are the means by which to evaluate DAT.
Our program (www.dolphintale.com) here in Australia works with rescued dolphins and their progeny. These dolphins would be dead, long ago, if they had not been rescued. Now, as dolphins living among humans, it is important that they have life experiences that are enriching, stimulating, and as safe as possible to help them maintain their health. We know that our interactions with these dolphins are a real benefit to them as well as a benefit to those people who swim among them.
DAT needs to be investigated more fully. Research needs to be done by competent, well-funded scientists, who have no bias or agenda to push. Until this is done, we will have ill-informed campaigns such as the WDCS campaign, and the misdirection of papers such as the one by Marino and Lilienfeld.
Sincerely,
Scott Taylor
Director, Cetacean Studies Institute
Coffs Harbour, Australia