The Guardian (Charlottetown)

I already knew that owning a dog is good for my health

- John DeMont John DeMont is a columnist with the Chronicle Herald in Halifax.

When I read Monday that a new scientific study, as well as a newly released meta-analysis, melding together the statistica­l informatio­n from a bunch of earlier studies, had concluded that owning a dog is good for you, my initial reaction was, I could have saved them a lot of time and money.

I skimmed the informatio­n anyway, which was published in Circulatio­n: Cardiovasc­ular Quality and Outcomes, a journal of the American Heart Associatio­n. Based on 182,000 Swedes who had suffered strokes or heart attacks (wait, Swedes have heart attacks too?), the study made illuminati­ng reading.

Owning a dog meant a 33-per-cent lower risk of death for heart attack survivors who lived alone and a 27 per cent reduced risk for those who suffered a stroke compared to those who didn’t own a hound. The conclusion­s reached by the literature review, which piggybacke­d on the data of over 3.8 million patients taken from 10 separate studies, was even more striking.

Compared to non-owners, dog-owners experience­d a 24-per-cent reduced risk of allcause mortality. The researcher­s discovered they also had a 65-per-cent reduced risk of mortality after having heart attack, and 31-per-cent less chance of dying due to cardiovasc­ular-related issues than non-owners.

I, truthfully, have known this for a while. A dozen-or-so years ago, during an idle moment, I filled in an online test designed to tell me how old my body really was. Something must have been disagreeab­le about that number, since I have permanentl­y banished it from memory. What I did note at the time was the list of things that added to the wear-and-tear, only one of which I can now remember: I did not own a dog.

Enter the pooch in the picture, a golden doodle that we acquired from a breeder in the parking lot of an Irving Big Stop, in a transactio­n as quick and wordless as a pre-2019 weed deal. I already lived in a lively, loving household with plenty of company. But I still quickly noticed how the presence of Auggie, named after the old cartoon character, changed life.

For one thing, even a fiftysomet­hing male is interestin­g to others while walking a cute, goofy puppy.

Dogs make even misanthrop­es social. Little kids run over and ask permission to pet him. So do university students, perhaps because Auggie reminds them of home, and old-timers, who stick out a hand towards him, as if reaching back to their youth.

Over the years I’ve made friends with other dog owners, in the way that parents become well-acquainted with the moms and dads of their children’s pals.

When I asked Kramer about the link between dog-ownership and longevity she pointed to the way walking keeps us healthier. I have to agree.

Auggie won’t eat unless he gets a real leg stretch, during which he can sniff and christen, with his endless supply of urine, every passing tree, fire hydrant and fence post.

If I walk in the door after a prolonged absence and Auggie fixes with the sad eyes well, I must take him out, no matter how late, how bad the weather, how tired I am.

So he keeps me moving. Some days, walking alongside him, it helps me to see the world as he does: always fresh and new, endlessly interestin­g.

But there’s something else too, that might be reflected in statistics that show being around a dog reduces blood pressure as much as blood pressure medicine.

“Its probably a combinatio­n of factors,” explains Kramer, which is undoubtedl­y true.

But all I can say is this: if you open the door on a day when no one else is there, or perhaps everyone inside is distracted by life, it does the heart good to be greeted by a shaggy beast wagging his tail, overjoyed at your return.

 ?? JOHN DEMONT ?? Auggie waits for his beloved master or, perhaps, food.
JOHN DEMONT Auggie waits for his beloved master or, perhaps, food.
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