Team Comfort Dogs to the rescue.
This holiday season, passengers in concourses C and D were in for a stop-you-in-your-tracks sight: an indoor dog park whose participants are available for petting and cuddling. For the first half of Christmas week, United Airlines invited comfort animals to seven of its hub airports nationwide. The quick therapy sessions were held on the floor instead of a couch, and passengers were encouraged to consult with a different kind of “expert.”
On the Monday before Christmas, the four-legged messengers of calm participating in the United Paws event included Patsy; Rugi, a great Dane-Labrador mix; Cinnamon, an English bulldog; Callie, a velvety black greyhound; Pepper, a rescue blend of retriever, Labrador, terrier and hound; and Cello, a Cairn terrier dressed in an elf costume. In terms of displays of affection, the snaggle-toothed Cinnamon licked, and Cello high-fived and twirled in circles. Callie would slide her toothpick-thin body into open arms for a hug; Patsy would drop on her back and shake her leg blissfully whenever a tickler found her sweet spot.
“We introduced this program as a way to bring a bit of comfort and joy to our customers during this busy season of travel, because we understand the travel experience can be a bit rough,” said Jonathan Guerin, a United spokesman. “The science proves that simply petting a dog reduces stress, and they always bring smiles, too.”
The airline tested the idea during the Fourth of July holiday and plans to employ the program — done in partnership with People Animals Love (PAL), a Capitol Hill organization that arranges pet visits at nursing centers, mental health facilities and other sites — during other cortisol-spiking travel periods, such as spring break and summer, when hordes of student groups descend on Washington.