Health

Amazon dolphin therapy: Aiding people with disabilities in Brazil

Patients include autistic youth, individuals with cerebral palsy or Down syndrome, and those who have lost limbs.

Physiotherapist Igor Simoes Andrade and young people with disabilities swim with pink dolphins on the Rio Negro river in Iranduba, Amazonas state, Brazil. [Michael Dantas/AFP]
Physiotherapist Igor Simoes Andrade and young people with disabilities swim with pink dolphins on the Rio Negro river in Iranduba, Amazonas state, Brazil. [Michael Dantas/AFP]

By AFP |

IRANDUBA, Brazil -- Floating in the Rio Negro river in the Brazilian Amazon, Luiz Felipe, who has Down syndrome, beams as he hugs a pink dolphin during a special therapy session.

Luiz Felipe, 27, is one of several patients with disabilities who traveled from the nearby city of Manaus to take part in the alternative therapy sessions, which have helped some 400 individuals over the past two decades.

Patients include young people who are autistic, those with cerebral palsy or Down syndrome, and others who have lost limbs.

Physiotherapist Igor Simoes Andrade, 49, says that while his special animal therapy is "the first in the world," it is not a replacement for conventional treatments.

Physiotherapist Igor Simoes Andrade interacts with a red river dolphin in the Rio Negro, Iranduba, Amazonas, Brazil. Andrade founded the 'Bototherapy' program in 2016, offering therapeutic swimming sessions with wild dolphins for people with physical and mental disabilities. [Michael Dantas/AFP]
Physiotherapist Igor Simoes Andrade interacts with a red river dolphin in the Rio Negro, Iranduba, Amazonas, Brazil. Andrade founded the 'Bototherapy' program in 2016, offering therapeutic swimming sessions with wild dolphins for people with physical and mental disabilities. [Michael Dantas/AFP]

Still, it "brings them joy, happiness, contact with nature and a strength you don't have in hospital environments."

The sessions are provided free of charge with the support of sponsors.

'Bototherapy'

Hannah Fernandes, a neuropsychologist who works with children, said the unique therapy also had "social benefits," as those with disabilities come into contact with people and situations from outside their daily lives.

Before entering the water, Luiz Felipe and two young women taking part in the session do breathing exercises and yoga to relax before coming into contact with the dolphins.

Fernandes said the first time Luis Felipe attended one of the sessions he "didn't dare" to enter the water. Today he is full of self-confidence.

The pink river dolphins -- known as boto -- approach the group out of curiosity, swimming between their legs and floating among them, eager for human attention.

The "bototherapy" sessions have been approved by the Ibama environmental regulator.

Simoes said the therapy helps his patients with "balance, strengthening the spine and psychomotor skills."

"Here we don't treat pathologies but human beings," he said.

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