02/12/2025
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In a hospital in Calais, France, a 15-year-old stallion named Peyo moves softly from room to room, offering quiet companionship to patients in palliative care. Once a champion show horse, he now devotes his days to a calling that seems almost otherworldly.
Affectionately dubbed Doctor Peyo, he isn’t a typical therapy animal. Peyo has an uncanny ability to sense who needs comfort most. Without any cue, he’ll stop outside a patient’s door and gently lift a leg—his silent way of telling his trainer, Hassen Bouchakour, that someone inside needs him.
When he enters a room, Peyo stands calmly at the bedside. Patients rest their hands on his warm coat, stroke his mane, or simply soak in his steady presence. Sometimes he stays for minutes; other times, for hours—filling the space with a kind of peace words can’t create.
His journey began when Bouchakour noticed Peyo’s instinctive pull toward people who were sick or distressed. What started as a surprising behavior became a mission to bring comfort to those nearing the end of life.
Since 2016, Peyo has become a beloved presence at Calais Hospital. Families, caregivers, and medical staff all speak of the profound calm he brings. Some patients even require less pain medication after his visits—a quiet testament to the healing power of his presence.
Science may not yet understand how Peyo senses illness or emotional pain, but his impact is undeniable. In the most fragile moments of life, this gentle stallion offers something beyond medicine: comfort, connection, and grace.