Explaining cats and dogs: The benefits of pet ownership to alleviate loneliness during COVID-19
The concept of a dog as "man’s best friend" is nothing new. Sigmund Freud wrote about personal accounts with his pet dog, a red chow named Jofi, who became his late-life and therapy companion. On account of a series of mouth operations he endured, he said of Jofi:
"I wish you could have seen with me what sympathy Jofi shows me during these hellish days, as if she understood everything."
Not even Freud could have predicted that, 90 years later, a pandemic would sweep the globe, locking down countries and confining people to their homes, but if he could have, he probably would've prescribed a dog to counter the loneliness many people have experienced.
A cure for loneliness
Recently, 384 dog and cat owners, and non-pet owners, took part in an online survey that evaluated their mood, mindfulness and loneliness levels during the stage three COVID-19 lockdown. Many of those who owned dogs expressed sentiments similar to Freud:
"If it wasn’t for the dogs I would have had nobody here with me. They don’t talk back, but they’re definitely here for me."
And another:
"She’s a lifesaver. I have no idea how I’d cope without her. Gives me company, purpose, some affection, and joy."
Some participants even saw the experience of being locked down as a positive, because it gave them the opportunity to spend more time with their pets:
"Having him has made COVID-19 in many ways a positive experience. It has given me extra time to spend with him."
Cats versus dogs
But it wasn’t just dog owners who expressed the emotional benefits of owning a pet during the pandemic. Cat owners, too, said having a pet made lockdown more bearable, and reduced loneliness.
Dog owners placed more importance on physical connection, with one respondent saying:
"I have someone to cuddle."
Dog and cat owners both expressed the importance of talking to their pets:
"She gives me a reason to talk out loud."
The survey, published in The International Journal of Social Psychiatry, also tried to gain an understanding from owners of how COVID-19 affected their pets.
Two clear themes emerged. Cats and dogs each received more companionship and attention and, as a consequence, appeared happier and more settled, although dogs also displayed increased. clinginess.
Among cats, however, there was a greater range of emotional change, with some cats being described by owners as "put out" or disturbed by the owner’s longer presence at home.
The study’s chief Investigator, Dr Jessica Oliva from Monash’s School of Psychological Sciences, is no stranger to the benefits of the human-dog relationship, dedicating herself to completing a PhD investigating the influence of oxytocin on human-dog bonding after adopting her late dog, Bonnie, from the Lost Dog’s Home a decade ago.
“So grand was our relationship that I wanted to somehow understand it in scientific terms,” she says. “I now know that what we shared transcends anything that I could possibly evaluate in this way.”
Pets, purpose and parks
While cat and dog owners in the survey endorsed the mind and mood benefits of owning a pet, dog owners felt a far greater sense of “purpose, motivation and routine”.
“It was a pronounced theme among dog owners that their pets were a catalyst for them to get out of the house for the routine of daily walks and things like ball-chasing games,” Dr Oliva says.
“This, obviously, also gave them the opportunities to socialise with other people doing the same thing at dog parks.”
Dr Oliva was reserved about the recent increase in pet ownership observed by animal welfare shelters, warning that adopting a pet should be a well-thought-out decision.
“While it's great that lots of cats and dogs have been re-homed from shelters during this time, owning a pet is a commitment to care for and enrich the life of the animal for the duration of its lifetime,” she says.
At the time of writing this article Dr Jessica Oliva was employed in the Monash School of Psychological Sciences at Monash University.