Ducklings were used for medical therapy in the 1950s. |
Science & Industry |
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Hospital staff had at least one specific method for duckling therapy: Kids were encouraged to cuddle the sweet baby birds wrapped in a towel. But ducklings turned out to be pretty versatile, and were an accessible ray of sunshine for kids of most mobility levels. The largest photo in the Life spread shows a crowd of children feeding a pool full of ducklings that had been set up on a hospital sun deck; some kids are standing, while others are in beds arranged along the sides. One 3-year-old polio patient attached to a chest respirator is pictured smiling and watching the ducklings swim around a small tub next to her bed. | |
Animal therapy programs are far more common in hospitals, schools, and other facilities today. But while species of therapy animals may be more diverse than you think — ducks are still on the table! — you'd be hard-pressed to find a therapy alligator in a medical setting now. | |
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The first American guide dog school opened in 1929. | |||||||||
While guide dogs for blind people have a long history, the idea really took off after World War I, when many soldiers in the trenches were blinded by mustard gas. The movement started in Germany and piqued the interest of Dorothy Harrison Eustis, a wealthy American who trained police dogs, in the 1920s. After visiting a German training school, she chronicled her experience in the Saturday Evening Post, which caught the attention of a 19-year-old blind man named Morris Frank. Together, the pair founded The Seeing Eye, a guide dog school in Morris Township, New Jersey, that's still in operation today — and is where the term "seeing eye dog" comes from. | |||||||||
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