Toronto Star

Dogs may be good for kids’ social ties

If child feels close to pet, bonds with parents, pals are stronger, study finds

- GALADRIEL WATSON THE WASHINGTON POST

I like to think I have a great relationsh­ip with my children. While I can’t brag that my 19 years with my son and 16 years with my daughter have been perfect, I can chalk them up as pretty darn good. Is it because I’m (ahem) a great mother? Or, rather, should I be thanking our family dog?

Arecent study found that children who feel close to their pet dogs are also more securely attached to their parents and have better bonds with their best friends. Researcher­s at Kent State University looked at 99 children ages 9 to 11 who owned pet dogs. These children answered questionna­ires about their relationsh­ips with their dogs, parents and friends.

The study found if one type of relationsh­ip was strong, it’s likely the others were, too. In general, children with strong bonds with their dogs also had strong bonds with their parents and best friends. But which came first? Kathryn Kerns, a psychology professor at Kent State and one of the lead researcher­s, says they don’t know. It could be that caring for pets makes children feel closer to the significan­t humans in their lives, or it could be that their human relationsh­ips model how they should treat their pets. It could also be a reciprocal jumble: A positive experience with the pet leads to being more co-operative with parents, and that positive experience with parents leads to being closer to the pet.

The researcher­s also watched how the children interacted with their dogs. They found that those who had more physical contact with their pets had better relationsh­ips with their mothers — but not necessaril­y with their fathers (or friends).

“Given that mothers play a bit more of a role as a safe haven, as the one to go to for comfort, than dad, perhaps that’s why we found that effect,” Kerns says. “The close relationsh­ip with the mother might be more of a model for closeness with others, including the dog.”

Kerns and her team also did another study: How do pet dogs affect children’s emotions during stressful events?

The same 99 preadolesc­ents were asked to deliver a five- minute autobiogra­phical speech. The speech would be watched live by the experiment­ers and, to up the stress factor, videotaped to be supposedly evaluated later.

Half the children had their dogs in the room, while half didn’t. “Kids who had their dogs present felt much happier throughout the whole process,” Kerns says. And having physical contact with the dog — its chin on the child’s lap, or the dog leaning against the child’s leg — made the experience even less stressful.

In an unrelated study, children did a similar stress test either with a pet dog, with a parent or alone. The stress level was lowest when the children were with their dogs. Then there is a study on adults, who performed a stressful task with a pet dog, with a friend or alone. They were least stressed when they had their pet dogs with them. When alone, the stress level went up. And when with a friend, the stress level was highest of all.

Why can dogs offer better support than humans?

“Humans can be judgmental in a way that dogs aren’t,” Kerns says. While we might worry a friend is silently evaluating our performanc­e, we know a dog couldn’t care less.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? If you have a close bond with your child, it’s possible you can thank your dog, one study suggests.
DREAMSTIME If you have a close bond with your child, it’s possible you can thank your dog, one study suggests.

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