NEW YORK — While research has suggested that
pets can offer people health benefits, a new study from Finland
finds that pet owners tend to be heavier, less active and in
poorer health than those without a pet.
However, that doesn’t mean pets are bad for
us, the researchers note. Rather, people most likely to have a
pet, such as middle-aged and home-owners, also tend to be more
sedentary and thicker around the middle.
Researchers at the University of Turku in
Finland report the findings in PLoS ONE, an online journal
published by the Public Library of Science.
A number of studies have suggested that
certain people benefit from living with a dog or cat – a pet may
help lower blood pressure and heart rate, for example, or ease
stress, loneliness and even dementia-related agitation in the
elderly.
But whether pet owners as a group are a
healthier lot has been unclear. The new findings suggest they’re
not.
Using survey data from more than 21,000 young
to middle-aged Finnish adults, researchers found that pet owners
were generally more likely to be overweight and to view their
own health as poor.
This was largely because pet owners tended to
be middle-aged, have less education and more health-risk
factors, explained Dr. Leena K. Koivusilta, the study’s lead
author.
And despite having Fido to take for walks,
even dog owners typically got little exercise.
This is likely because they were often
home-owners who could simply put the dog in the yard, Koivusilta
noted.
The fact that pet owners were in poorer
health does not mean that furry companions aren’t a health boon
in some cases, she told Reuters Health.
"In my opinion," Koivusilta said, "pets
provide us all with a vast potential for health promotion, and
this has indeed been shown when some special groups have been
studied."
Pet owners, according to the researchers, may just need to
make more of an effort – such as walking and playing with the
dog instead of showing him the way to the yard. – Reuters