Friends with malefit. The effects of keeping dogs and cats, sustaining
animal-related injuries and Toxoplasma infection on health and quality
of life. Jaroslav Flegr, Marek Preiss. bioRxiv, August 21, 2019.
https://doi.org/10.1101/742734
Abstract: Many studies show that
keeping cats and dogs has a positive impact on humans’ physical and
mental health and quality of life. The existence of this “pet
phenomenon” is now widely discussed because other studies performed
recently have demonstrated a negative impact of owning pets or no impact
at all. The main problem of many studies was the autoselection –
participants were informed about the aims of the study during
recruitment and later likely described their health and wellbeing
according to their personal beliefs and wishes, not according to their
real status. To avoid this source of bias, we did not mention pets
during participant recruitment and hid the pet-related questions among
many hundreds of questions in an 80-minute Internet questionnaire.
Results of our study performed on a sample of on 10,858 subjects showed
that liking cats and dogs has a weak positive association with quality
of life. However, keeping pets, especially cats, and even more being
injured by pets, were strongly negatively associated with many facets of
quality of life. Our data also confirmed that infection by the cat
parasite Toxoplasma had a very strong negative effect on quality of
life, especially on mental health. However, the infection was not
responsible for the observed negative effects of keeping pets, as these
effects were much stronger in 1,527 Toxoplasma-free subjects than in the
whole population. Any cross-sectional study cannot discriminate between
a cause and an effect. However, because of the large and still growing
popularity of keeping pets, the existence and nature of the reverse pet
phenomenon deserve the outmost attention.
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