No beneficial associations between living with a pet and mental health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic in a large UK longitudinal sample

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Abstract

Objective

During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an unprecedented interest in pet ownership, with many viewing pets as a coping strategy to mitigate isolation, loneliness, anxiety, and depression. However, the evidence that pet ownership is associated with mental health benefits is not conclusive.

Methods

6018 individuals in the UK completed online questionnaires from April 2020 and were recontacted at regular intervals for 12 months. We asked about pet ownership and pet adoption, and examined associations with depression, anxiety and anhedonia symptoms, and loneliness. We tested hypotheses related to dog ownership, exercise frequency and maintaining a daily structure, and the association between ownership and loneliness in individuals living alone.

Results

Pet ownership was not associated with beneficial effects on any of the mental health outcomes at the first assessment or longitudinally. Instead, associations were in the unexpected direction, with owners generally having slightly worse mental health symptoms and loneliness. Dog owners were more likely to report exercising daily or nearly every day (40 %), relative to individuals with no pets (35 %), but were not more likely to maintain a daily schedule. Among individuals living alone, both cat and dog owners were less lonely than non-owners, but effect sizes were small. Initial levels of depression, anxiety, anhedonia or loneliness did not predict subsequent pet adoption.

Conclusion

Our findings challenge the narrative around the beneficial associations between pet ownership and mental health, a probable driver of the “pandemic puppies” phenomenon. The benefits found, for exercise in dog owners and loneliness in pet owners living alone, were marginal.

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在英国的一个大型纵向样本中,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,与宠物一起生活与心理健康结果之间没有有益的联系
目的在 COVID-19 大流行期间,人们对饲养宠物产生了前所未有的兴趣,许多人将宠物视为缓解孤独、寂寞、焦虑和抑郁的一种应对策略。然而,拥有宠物对心理健康有益的证据并不确凿。方法 英国有 6018 人从 2020 年 4 月开始填写在线问卷,并在 12 个月内定期与他们再次联系。我们询问了拥有宠物和领养宠物的情况,并研究了与抑郁、焦虑和失乐症状以及孤独感之间的关联。我们检验了与养狗、运动频率和保持日常生活习惯有关的假设,以及养狗与独居者孤独感之间的关联。相反,两者之间的关系却出乎意料,养狗者的精神健康症状和孤独感普遍略差。与不养宠物的人(35%)相比,养狗的人更有可能每天或几乎每天锻炼身体(40%),但他们并不更有可能坚持每天锻炼。在独居者中,养猫和养狗的人比不养猫和养狗的人更不孤独,但影响程度很小。最初的抑郁、焦虑、失乐症或孤独感水平并不能预测随后的宠物收养情况。 结论我们的研究结果对有关拥有宠物与心理健康之间有益关系的说法提出了质疑,这可能是 "大流行小狗 "现象的一个驱动因素。在养狗者的运动和独居者的孤独感方面发现的益处微乎其微。
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来源期刊
Mental Health and Prevention
Mental Health and Prevention Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
24 days
期刊最新文献
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