The Columbus Dispatch

Dog owners tend to walk more, study shows

- By Gretchen Reynolds The New York Times

Dog owners are about four times more likely than other people to meet today’s physical activity guidelines, according to a new study of dogs and exercise.

The study, which involved hundreds of British households, suggests that having a dog can strongly influence how much people exercise. But it also raises questions about why some dog owners never walk their pets or otherwise work out and whether anyone should acquire a dog just to encourage exercise.

Most people who live with dogs are familiar with their joy at ambling along paths, trails and sidewalks. They also have to deal with their pet’s jowly dejection when work deadlines or other issues interfere with walks.

Few would be surprised that past studies have found links between dog ownership and frequent walking. But many of those studies have been small and relied solely on people’s sometimesu­nreliable recall of their exercise routines. They also have not looked at whether walking a dog might displace other kinds of physical activity, which would mean that dog owners were not exercising more, in total, than other people; only that they were exercising more often with a dog.

Those issues prompted exercise scientists from the University of Liverpool and other institutio­ns to undertake one of the most comprehens­ive comparison­s yet of how often, whether and in what ways dog owners and their dog-less neighbors exercise.

For the new study, published in April in Scientific Reports, they first turned to a neighborho­od near Liverpool and began asking families in the area about their lives and pets. The researcher­s focused on a single community so that everyone involved should share approximat­ely the same local environmen­t with similar access to sidewalks, parks or other amenities that might affect their exercise routines.

They wound up with almost 700 participan­ts from 385 neighborin­g households, half of them women and most middle-aged, although about 70 children also participat­ed. About a third of these people owned a dog.

The scientists asked everyone in these households to complete lengthy questionna­ires about how much and in what ways they moved each week. They also provided activity monitors to a few of the families and asked the members to wear them for a week while exercising as usual.

Then they collected and compared data.

It was immediatel­y clear that people who owned dogs walked far more often than those without dogs, said Carri Westgarth, a lecturer in human-animal interactio­n at the University of Liverpool who led the study.

In general, according to both the questionna­ires and activity monitors, most dog owners spent close to 300 minutes each week walking with their dogs, which was about 200 more minutes of walking per week than people without dogs.

Due primarily to these walks, most dog owners met or exceeded the standard guidelines for exercising for health, which call for at least 150 minutes of moderate exercise every week.

More unexpected, dog owners also spent slightly more time than other people jogging, cycling and visiting the gym solo, without their dogs, indicating that walking Fido had not bumped other activities from their lives.

The influence of dogs extended to the young, the scientists found. Children whose families owned dogs walked for about 100 minutes each week and played and romped with their pets for another 200 minutes, making them substantia­lly more active than children in homes without dogs.

At the same time, though, and to the puzzlement of the researcher­s, a small portion of dog owners never walked their dogs, and those owners almost all were young, healthy and female.

Taken as a whole, the results suggest that people with dogs are more physically active than those without, Westgarth said.

But the findings also show that dog owners can remain sedentary and their reasons should be investigat­ed, she said. The women in this study who did not walk their pets might have worried about controllin­g their animals or their safety on the streets, or they might simply have disliked walking.

Such concerns need to be acknowledg­ed, understood and addressed if having a dog is to be promoted as a way of increasing exercise, Westgarth said.

Of course, this kind of observatio­nal study cannot determine whether dog ownership actually causes people to move more or if active people also own dogs. The study also did not account for difference­s in pets’ sizes, breeds, temperamen­t or training and whether those affect owners’ willingnes­s to walk. However, the researcher­s plan to look at those issues in future studies.

 ?? [PEXELS] ?? A study of British households found that dog owners spent close to 300 minutes each week walking with their pets; non-owners averaged about 100 minutes of walking per week.
[PEXELS] A study of British households found that dog owners spent close to 300 minutes each week walking with their pets; non-owners averaged about 100 minutes of walking per week.

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