Donkey Therapy and the Quiet Revolution in Psychiatric Care

Patients at a psychiatric hospital near Paris are spending structured time with donkeys as part of their treatment regimen, an approach staff describe as a form of animal medicine with measurable effects on patient wellbeing. The programme, running at a facility in the southeastern suburbs of the capital, places patients in supervised contact with the animals as a complement to conventional psychiatric care.
The practice rests on a growing body of clinical observation that controlled animal interaction can reduce anxiety, improve mood, and support social engagement in patients with conditions including severe depression, psychosis, and personality disorders. For a population often resistant to verbal therapy or medication regimens, the donkey appears to offer something neither easily replicated: a non-judgmental presence that does not demand interpretation.
What the programme looks like
Staff at the hospital have developed a structured curriculum around the donkey sessions. Patients are assigned specific care tasks — grooming, feeding, leading — and progress is monitored by therapeutic staff. The animals involved are specifically selected for temperament, with calm disposition and predictable behaviour prioritized over size or breed. Donkeys, according to practitioners, offer particular advantages over more commonly used therapy animals: their slower pace reduces stimulation overload, and their size means patients must engage at a respectful physical distance, which can ease social anxiety.
Patients who have participated in the programme have spoken positively of the experience. Accounts collected by staff describe a sense of being accepted without condition, and improvements in willingness to engage with other therapeutic activities following donkey sessions. Hospital administrators say the programme has contributed to a measurable reduction in agitation incidents in participating wards, though they caution that animal therapy is always used as an adjunct, not a substitute, for clinical treatment.
The evidence base
Animal-assisted interventions have been studied in psychiatric settings for decades, with the strongest evidence clustering around reduction in anxiety and improvement in social functioning. A 2022 review in a peer-reviewed journal found that structured animal contact reduced self-reported anxiety in psychiatric inpatients, though researchers noted significant variation in study design and called for more standardised protocols. The French hospital's programme draws on this broader literature while adapting protocols to its specific patient population and institutional context.
The mechanism researchers propose is not exotic: caring for an animal requires presence, routine, and accountability — qualities that psychiatric patients often struggle to maintain in their own lives. The donkey, being a domestic animal with consistent and legible needs, functions as a kind of scaffold for these skills. Staff supervision ensures the interaction remains structured and that patients are not placed in situations of physical risk.
Why this matters now
Psychiatric care in France, as across much of Europe, faces sustained pressure from rising demand, staffing constraints, and a long tail of institutional underinvestment that the post-pandemic period has not resolved. Hospitals are searching for adjunct therapies that can extend the reach of existing clinical staff without requiring large capital expenditure or new infrastructure. Animal therapy programmes, where feasible, offer a relatively low-cost complement to existing treatment frameworks.
The appeal extends beyond economics. Psychiatric treatment has historically privileged pharmacological and verbal modalities, sometimes at the expense of embodied, experiential approaches. The donkey programme represents a quiet assertion that contact with the natural world — with a living creature whose needs are legible and whose responses are not linguistic — can be therapeutic in its own right. This is not a fringe view; it echoes practices that have developed independently across a range of institutional settings, from prisons to care homes to schools.
The limits of the frame
The programme is not without critics, even within the medical community. Some psychiatrists question the reliability of self-reported improvements in patient accounts, and note that the absence of large-scale controlled trials means the evidence base remains preliminary. Others raise concerns about hygiene, animal welfare, and the risk of romanticising a practice that cannot substitute for properly resourced clinical care. These are legitimate concerns, and the institutions running animal therapy programmes have an obligation to subject their methods to ongoing scrutiny.
What is notable, however, is that the debate is now being conducted in the language of clinical evidence rather than dismissal. Animal therapy has moved from the margins of psychiatric practice toward something approaching mainstream acceptance — not because the anecdotes are compelling, but because the methodological standards applied to it have tightened. That shift is worth tracking.
The hospital outside Paris will continue its programme. Staff say the donkeys are now as much a part of the institution's therapeutic identity as its medication protocols and ward layouts. That is either a sign of how desperate psychiatric care has become for new tools, or a sign that medicine is slowly relearning what pre-industrial cultures understood: that contact with animals is not merely recreational, but constitutive of human wellbeing. Perhaps both.
This publication covered the France 24 report on the therapy donkey programme at a Paris-adjacent psychiatric hospital, with additional reference to peer-reviewed literature on animal-assisted interventions in psychiatric settings. The primary source is France 24's original reporting from 1 June 2026.