Qualitative Research on the Primary Effect of Fish Pet Ownership Using the Bottleium, a Bottle-Type Aquarium, on Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Japan: A Potential Preventive Measure towards Social Isolation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Ethical Approval
2.2. Participants
2.3. Interview Data Collection and Analysis
2.4. Questionnaire
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Handing and Maintaining the Bottleium
3.3. The Effects of Fish Ownership
3.3.1. Observation of Fish and Water Snail
3.3.2. Interaction between the Fish and the Owner
3.3.3. Taking Care of the Fish as Pet Owner
3.3.4. Facilitation of Interpersonal Interaction
3.3.5. Development of Support System
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Percentage (n) |
---|---|
Sex | |
Male | 5.3% (1) |
Female | 94.7% (18) |
Age | |
60s | 10.5% (2) |
70s | 42.1% (8) |
80s | 47.4% (9) |
Living Status | |
Alone | 78.9% (15) |
With spouse | 21.1% (4) |
Current pet ownership | |
Yes | 5.3% (1) |
No | 94.7% (18) |
Previous experience of pet ownership | |
Yes | 84.2% (16) |
No | 15.8% (3) |
From Interview | |||
---|---|---|---|
ID | Theme | Sub-theme | Narrative example |
a | Observation of fish and water snail | ||
observing animal behavior | “The fish spits out the flake and eat it again and spits again out. They spit out big flakes.” (Participant ID C. H) | ||
forget time | “I usually clean the room in the morning but (observed the fish and) when I realized, it was time to leave home.” (Participant ID B, ID C) | ||
b | Interaction between fish and the owner | ||
routine greetings | “I call my fish’s name and then say ‘ohayo (good morning)’ (everyday).” (Participant ID D, G, L, N, O, R) | ||
spontaneous interaction | “The fish seems to jump out when changing water. So I say ‘No, don’t come out’ (to fish).” (Participant ID A, ID G) | ||
relaxing effect | “I take care of my husband at home. So right now, it is like I have two people to take care of. But when I take care of fish, it sooths me.” (Participant ID M, O, P) | ||
c | Taking care of the fish as pet owner | ||
basic care | “I wake up in the morning and exercise, feed fish, and prepare my own meal.” (Participant ID T). | ||
attentive care | “The weather seems hot and when I leave, I feel like leaving the air conditioner on for fish (because I worry)” (Participant ID A, ID B and ID C and ID F) “I changed the water using Natural Water (bottled water) and the water was cleaner than usual. I am going to try it again.” (Participant ID F). | ||
priority | “(after owning Bottleium) The center of my life is fish now. Fish First.” (Participant ID A, ID B) “When I wake up in the morning, (the first thing) I look at fish and when I sleep, I tell it that I am going to turn the light off now. Everything is ‘fish’ now.” (Participant ID C) | ||
staying active | “I first thought that the purpose of the workshop was to build a small aquarium without fish. But at the end of the workshop, we each got a fish. At first I was a bit afraid but owning a living animal keeps me active.” (Participant ID P) | ||
d | Facilitation of interpersonal interaction | ||
talk about fish | “When we gather, we talk about fish right away.” (Participant ID C) | ||
information exchange | “I learned (from other owner) that you have to remove baby water snail (because the numbers will increase drastically), so I did” (Participant ID I) | ||
baby water snail adoption | “I adopted by snail from Participant ID B.” (Participant ID A, R). | ||
visit each other’s house and observe | “This morning, my friend came to my house and I showed my fish.” (Participant ID O) | ||
supporting each other | “Participant ID E went to buy the water plant for us. He went and gave some to other participants too.” (Participant ID B). | ||
interaction with family | “My daughter is worried about the fish and calls me frequently. She asks me if the fish is ok.” (Participant ID B). | ||
From Observational Research | |||
ID | Theme | Sub-theme | Narrative example |
d | Facilitation of interpersonal interaction | ||
information exchange | “(Non-participant, Male, 80s) I hear that water snails gather on the grass.” | ||
baby water snail adoption | “My snails died so I got some more from Participant ID B” (Participant ID C, L) | ||
visit each other’s house and observe | “(My friend) comes to my house and watch the fish for two to three hours. (To other friend) Please come to watch next time!” (Participant ID B). | ||
triggering conversation | “(Non-participant, Male, 80s) When I see someone, I don’t ask but the first thing they say is ‘My fish is doing well’ (because they know that I know, about their Bottleium ownership).” | ||
spreading conversation | “(To other participant walking by) Come in! (to the community space) Please look at my Bottleium. (Participant ID T).” -responding-“Is this my granddaughter (water snail)? (Participant ID B)”-others joining-“(Non-participant, Male, 80s) There are so much babies”. | ||
e | Development of support system | ||
care during hospitalization | “The lady said that she’s going to get treated in the hospital. So I volunteered to take care of her fish” (Non-participant, Male, 80s) “I had two Bottleiums in my house for a while when the other lady had to go to emergency. She called me and asked me to take care of fish after calling the ambulance because she was going to the hospital.” (Participant ID B) |
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Takase, M.; Ogino, R.; Yoshida, K.; Kusu, H.; Kenmochi, T.; Goto, J. Qualitative Research on the Primary Effect of Fish Pet Ownership Using the Bottleium, a Bottle-Type Aquarium, on Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Japan: A Potential Preventive Measure towards Social Isolation. Geriatrics 2021, 6, 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics6010017
Takase M, Ogino R, Yoshida K, Kusu H, Kenmochi T, Goto J. Qualitative Research on the Primary Effect of Fish Pet Ownership Using the Bottleium, a Bottle-Type Aquarium, on Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Japan: A Potential Preventive Measure towards Social Isolation. Geriatrics. 2021; 6(1):17. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics6010017
Chicago/Turabian StyleTakase, Mai, Ryogo Ogino, Keishiro Yoshida, Hikari Kusu, Tetsuya Kenmochi, and Jun Goto. 2021. "Qualitative Research on the Primary Effect of Fish Pet Ownership Using the Bottleium, a Bottle-Type Aquarium, on Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Japan: A Potential Preventive Measure towards Social Isolation" Geriatrics 6, no. 1: 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics6010017
APA StyleTakase, M., Ogino, R., Yoshida, K., Kusu, H., Kenmochi, T., & Goto, J. (2021). Qualitative Research on the Primary Effect of Fish Pet Ownership Using the Bottleium, a Bottle-Type Aquarium, on Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Japan: A Potential Preventive Measure towards Social Isolation. Geriatrics, 6(1), 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics6010017