Exploring human-animal interactions beyond academic research: A rapid review of grey literature
Siyu Ru, Daniel Villarreal Hernandez, Szymon Parzniewski, Haorui Wu

TL;DR
This paper reviews non-academic sources to show how human-animal interactions benefit well-being, community development, and disaster response.
Contribution
The study highlights the value of grey literature in understanding human-animal interactions beyond academic research.
Findings
HAIs benefit individual and animal well-being as well as family dynamics.
HAIs encourage prosocial behaviors and support community development.
HAIs improve disaster preparedness and response in various settings.
Abstract
Increasing recognition of the diverse benefits of human-animal interactions (HAIs) has propelled related studies. Although most of the benefits have been illustrated by academic literature (e.g. journal articles, academic theses, and project reports), the grey literature contributes to a comprehensive understanding of HAIs and offers new perspectives, informing prospective research, practices, and policies. Adapting the Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) approach, this rapid review examined 151 articles covering HAIs from 2016–2022. The univariate analysis results revealed that the sources covered various animal species (e.g. dogs, cats, birds), types of animals (e.g. companion animals, therapy animals, zoo animals), and vulnerable populations (e.g. older adults, people with disabilities). HAIs could be found across different settings, such as households, schools, healthcare…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies · Zoonotic diseases and public health · Animal and Plant Science Education
