Ont. retirement home using robotic pets to enhance dementia care
For many people, pets bring comfort, connection and joy – and the same can be true even when the animal isn’t real.
Robotic cats and dogs are being used to enhance the care of people with dementia at Amica Senior Lifestyles homes across the country, including Amica Dundas, where Sarah St. Pierre is the life enrichment co-ordinator in assisted living and memory care.
“It’s magical,” St. Pierre says of the connection residents can have with the pets. “Sometimes they’ll look right in the eyes of the cat especially, and just hold on to their paw and start petting them.”
The robotic pets are interactive and respond to touch. They make sounds, blink and roll over, and you can feel and hear a heart beat.
The pets are typically used one-on-one with residents who show interest in them. They can be particularly comforting to people who have had their own dog or cat in the past.
“It calms people. You can see someone’s caring instinct just takes over and wants to take care of the pet and comfort them, bring them close to you,” says St. Pierre.
Carrie McAiney, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo’s School of Health Sciences and Schlegel Research Chair in dementia, says pets bring unconditional love and safety.
For people with dementia who are living in a care setting, McAiney says pets – even robotic ones – can help with feelings of isolation.
“Having pets is something that can bring them joy, and happiness and safety and bring back memories of maybe their own pets or pets that they had in their lives through other people.”
McAiney says more research does need to be done on the benefits of robotic pets, and offers one caution: they can’t replace human contact and connection with real people.
Robotic pets can be easily ordered online, and the only maintenance required is battery replacement.
St. Pierre says the pets are special and she’s seen how much joy they can bring, as well as in some cases, improved communication.
“Meaningful moments are so important,” St. Pierre says. “In a day, to get those little meaningful moments, I feel like I’ve done my job.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Tyre Nichols' brutal beating by police shown on video
Memphis authorities released video footage Friday showing Tyre Nichols being beaten by police officers who held the Black motorist down and repeatedly struck him with their fists, boots and batons as he screamed for his mother and pleaded, ''I'm just trying to go home.'

CRA head says it 'wouldn't be worth the effort' to review all ineligible pandemic payments
The head of the Canada Revenue Agency says it 'wouldn't be worth the effort' to fully review $15.5 billion in potentially ineligible pandemic wage benefit payments flagged by Canada's Auditor General.
Lifelong Toronto Maple Leafs fan fulfils dream of seeing first game, passes away next day
Mike Davy always dreamed of going to a Toronto Maple Leafs game, and once it finally happened, he passed away the night after.
WHO decision on COVID-19 emergency won't affect Canada's response: Tam
The World Health Organization will announce Monday whether it thinks COVID-19 still represents a global health emergency but Canada's top doctor says regardless of what the international body decides, Canada's response to the coronavirus will not change.
Canadian university faculty getting older, more female compared to 50 years ago: StatCan
Canadian university professors are mostly older and increasingly more female compared to 50 years ago, a new report from Statistics Canada has found.
'This is too much': B.C. mom records police handcuffing 12-year-old in hospital
A review has been launched after police officers were recorded restraining a handcuffed Indigenous child on the floor of a Vancouver hospital – an incident the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs has denounced as "horrendous."
Canadian Hyundai vehicles unaffected by theft issue in the U.S., company says
Hyundai cars in Canada don't have the same anti-theft issue compared to those in the United States, a company spokesperson says, following reports that two American auto insurers are refusing to write policies for older models.
Video shows struggle for hammer during Pelosi attack
Video released publicly Friday shows the husband of former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi struggling with his assailant for control of a hammer moments before he was struck in the head during a brutal attack in the couple's San Francisco home last year.
Remembering the horrors of the Holocaust 78 years after liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau
In an emotional and powerful speech at an International Holocaust Remembrance Day event in Ottawa, a survivor stressed the importance of remembering the millions of victims murdered by the Nazis during the Second World War and underscored the need to stand up against anti-semitism and hate.