A cancer patient’s cats inspired a push for pets in hospice wards
[June 25, 2026]
By VANESSA GERA
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — When Ewa Lutka-Krawczyk was diagnosed with
gallbladder cancer, her first thought was for Gaja, a shelter dog she
took in three years ago. She asked her doctor to assure her she would
live a few more years so the deeply attached Gaja “wouldn't be left
behind.”
But the prognosis was grim, and this month the 70-year-old was admitted
to the palliative ward of a Warsaw hospital. Left at home with
Lutka-Krawczyk's husband, Gaja was barely eating.
“She is waiting for me,” Lutka-Krawczyk said from her bed, where she
rested with a draining tube attached to her abdomen.
Under proposed new legislation in Poland, patients like Lutka-Krawczyk
soon would have the right to be visited in hospices and palliative care
wards by their pets. Visits are already allowed in many clinics, but
there is no universal right under the law.
One expert reports an ‘epidemic of loneliness’
Dr. Tomasz Dzierżanowski, director of the Palliative Medicine Clinic at
the Medical University of Warsaw, where Lutka-Krawczyk is being treated,
has led the proposal, which was introduced to parliament by a member of
Prime Minister Donald Tusk's centrist party.
Dzierżanowski said the presence of a beloved pet can ease the physical
and spiritual pain of terminally ill patients at a time when society is
experiencing “an epidemic of loneliness.”
“We make sure that no patient dies alone,” Dzierżanowski said in an
interview with The Associated Press.
“When someone is suffering, it is important that someone is there for
them. Ideally, that should be another human being,” he said. “Sometimes,
however, there is no one."

Dzierżanowski said he often sees older patients isolated because they
have outlived their friends, as well as young patients feeling alone in
palliative care clinics because in today's world of screens and virtual
friends, they have not built the kind of friendships that earlier
generations often had.
Dzierżanowski said the catalyst for his mission was a seriously ill
cancer patient named Waldemar who was not afraid for himself but for his
two cats. Dzierżanowski arranged for the cats to be brought into the
ward.
The man's tears of happiness and the cats' emotional reaction — as well
as that of other patients and hospital staff who witnessed the reunion —
“made me realize that this issue finally needed to be addressed," he
said.
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Patient Ewa Lutka-Krawczyk holds the paw of Australian shepherd
therapy dog Kluska at the Palliative Medicine Clinic at the Medical
University of Warsaw, Poland, Monday, June 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Rafal
Niedzielski)
 Dzierżanowski allows pets to visit
patients in his clinic when conditions allow, which means that
Lukta-Krawczyk can look forward to a visit from Gaja. That pleased
her when she learned of it.
“In reality, animals in hospitals are already there anyway,” said
Katarzyna Piekarska, the lawmaker who introduced the legislation,
which is now in parliament's health committee. “That’s why it needs
to be regulated in the law.”
Therapy dogs are also allowed
Dzierżanowski also allows visits by therapy dogs. When the AP
visited, Kluska, an Australian shepherd, was making the rounds with
her owner, Małgorzata Brzozowska.
Kluska — whose name means “dumpling” — brought some distraction to
Lutka-Krawczyk, who held the dog's paw and smiled.
Another patient, Wojciech Zelik, a 58-year-old admitted with a
tumor, propped himself up to admire the dog as Brzozowska got Kluska
to perform tricks.
“She has such lovely fur to pet, so fluffy,” he said, reaching over
and rubbing her head.
Brzozowska said therapy dog visits also help relieve the stress of
nurses, cooks and other staff who tend to the terminally ill
patients. Several made a fuss over Kluska, crouching down to pet her
in the hallway — with the cook giving her slices of ham.
Brzozowska, a medical student, said the benefits are even greater
when the patients are visited by their own pets. It calms them,
their loved ones — and the animals, too.
“The dog isn’t as stressed,” she said. "We interpret this as meaning
that he simply knows what’s happening, that he knows where the
owner, who was always there before, has disappeared to.”
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