Could Dolphins Ease Chronic Pain?

One woman says swimming with dolphins has helped to ease her chronic pain.

ByABC News
February 9, 2009, 1:05 PM

Jan. 10, 2008 — -- "I woke up in recovery and couldn't breathe," said Claudia Rose.

Rose, 43, recalled waking up in the hospital after an operation to remove her gallbladder in November 2004. The surgery left her with internal scar tissue that restricted her diaphragm and upper rib cage and caused her chronic pain.

But Rose, a distance swimmer with miles of ocean races behind her, returned to the water after a few months to recuperate, and got some unexpected help for her pain dolphins.

Rose saw a pod of dolphins on her first post-surgery swim. The second time, the pod surrounded her and she swam with them.

But Rose believes her dolphin encounters are more than playful.

"I think they can detect the pain or that something is wrong," Rose said.

Dolphins tend to approach Rose when she is in severe pain, she said, and after these swims, she feels no pain for 10-12 days.

"It works much better than any drug or injection," Rose said.

Numerous studies have suggested that interacting with animals is beneficial to humans. For example, research has shown that owning a pet can have health benefits including lowered blood pressure and cholesterol, as well as reduced stress.

And some animals, like dogs with the ability to predict seizures, can have a direct impact on saving human lives.

But could it be possible that simply being around dolphins eases chronic pain?

Though Rose's physician, Joe Shurman, chair of pain management at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, Calif., chose not to comment on the validity of this idea, he did say that spending time with the gentle sea mammals could have some psychological benefits.

"The way dolphins swim and how gentle they are, it's almost like a meditative-type experience," Shurman said.

But dolphin experts are skeptical about whether dolphins can actually detect pain. Joan Mehew, director of the Special Needs Program at the Dolphin Research Center in Grassy Key, Fla., suggested the dolphins might be attracted to a swimmer because he or she is in their territory. They may simply be curious, or perhaps they have learned the swimmer's routine, she added.