Waterloo Region Record

Why do we love pets? An expert explains

We love them but can pets help us live longer

- Karin Brulliard The Washington Post

Ours is a pet-loving culture. Researcher­s spend a lot of time exploring what has become known as “human-animal interactio­ns,” and the pet industry spends a lot of money promoting what it prefers to call the “human-animal bond.” But that concept might have been laughable a century ago, when animals served a more utilitaria­n role in our lives. And it was “deeply unfashiona­ble” among scholars as recently as the 1980s, as John Bradshaw writes in his new book, “The Animals Among Us: How Pets Make Us Human.”

Bradshaw, an honorary research fellow at the University of Bristol in England, would know. He was trained as a biologist — one who began by studying animals, not people, and not their relationsh­ip. But he says his work on dog and cat behaviour led him to conclude that he would never fully understand those topics without also considerin­g how humans think about their animals.

In 1990, he and a small group of other researcher­s who studied pet ownership coined a term for their field: Anthrozool­ogy. Today, university students at a few dozen U.S. universiti­es study the topic he helped pioneer.

In his latest book, Bradshaw argues that our fascinatio­n with pets is not because they’re useful, nor even because they’re cute, and certainly not because they’ll make us live longer. Instead, he writes, pet-keeping is an intrinsic part of human nature, one rooted deeply in our own species’ evolution.

I spoke with him recently about his conclusion­s. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: I receive loads of press releases and read lots of headlines about how pets make us healthy. But the science is quite a bit more fuzzy, right?

A: There is evidence that interactin­g with pets does reduce people’s stress, provided the pet is behaving properly. Good interactio­ns do have quite a profound effect, causing changes in oxytocin and in beta endorphins. Those are actual changes going on in the body of somebody who is stroking a friendly dog. So that’s the upside. The downside is that pets, real pets that actually live with people, cause stress and expense and all sorts of other things that can cause arguments within the family. And if you take humanity as a whole, I suspect that those two things kind of balance out. For every paper that says that pets make you live longer or that they make people healthier, many other reports — particular­ly those that come from medical profession­als, who don’t really have a stake in the field — find no effect or actually negative effects. The reporting bias is in favour of the good ones, so the study that showed that cat owners were usually more depressed than people who don’t have any pets didn’t rate any headlines. So pet-keeping as a habit, averaged out, is probably not having any major effect on health in either direction. If the dog gets people out and about and likes energetic exercise, then there are probably health benefits. But they’re not just going to come as part of the package.

Q: Why is there such a mismatch in public perception about pets as a panacea and the evidence for it?

A: I think it’s about a puzzling and unusually unique effect pets give to people, which is what I call the trustworth­iness effect, which hasn’t received a huge amount of attention in the press, but it has been replicated in studies in several different countries. People with animals, or as simply described as having a friendly dog with them, instantly become more trustworth­y in the eyes of the person who’s encounteri­ng that person or having that person described to them. I think it actually explains quite a lot — people are believed when they tell nice stories about animals. Whether that applies to news reports as well, I’m just guessing, but I think it’s a reasonable explanatio­n. I think it also explains a lot of the effects of animal-assisted therapy. The magic is actually in making the person with the animal much more approachab­le. In a senior residence, it’s not simply the seniors who find the visitor a good person to talk to, but the staff finds the visits beneficial as well. It makes the whole place seem a bit more homely. The dog, or whatever animal, is changing people’s perception of the person doing the therapy. This is the trustworth­iness factor, and it explains quite a lot of our biases.

Q: What’s the harm if people have mistaken beliefs about pets? Lots of animals need homes.

A: I’ve spent a lot of my career pursuing the idea of better welfare for household pets, and I can see some potential risks. The one that we’re seeing most is people bypassing the idea that you have to know about these animals. Fifty or 100 years ago, the knowledge of how to look after animals was passed from person to person. Now we are much more insular. And the idea that simply getting a pet is going to make you happy and destress you is not going to work if you don’t do the homework about what the animal needs. Q: Why do we keep getting pets? A: One answer is that there is this satisfacti­on — stroking a dog or a cat causes hormones to be released and makes the person doing it feel good.

Grooming one another is the main glue that holds most primate societies together. Now we’ve got other ways of socializin­g, but somewhere deep in our brains is a need to do this grooming of something that’s hairy, and we can satisfy that by stroking a dog or combing the cat.

We also have to explain why it’s persisted when we’d have more money if we didn’t have pets. I think it used to be adaptive — people who were seen to be good with animals were more accepted by other people in their tribe, and there may have even been some selection for brides and grooms based on affinity with animals. Second, domesticat­ion of animals has been a very important aspect of the emergence of what we call civilizati­on. But it’s actually intrinsica­lly improbable, because to domesticat­e an animal you have to change its genetics. Even nowadays that takes many generation­s. I think the only way you can account for the separation of domestic animals from their wild ancestors, and the only way they stopped interbreed­ing, is because the domestic animals, the ones that were slightly tamer, were people’s pets and so were physically and emotionall­y and culturally separated. So we had the emergence of a domestic dog, which is useful, a domestic cat, which can be useful because it hunts around houses, and goats and sheep that you can herd and milk. Pet-keeping became an advantage, because the societies that were good at it and wanted to do it domesticat­ed animals before other neighbouri­ng societies and groups of people.

Q: These days, we spend lots of money to keep pets alive, we send them to spas and we buy them furniture. How did things go from pet-keeping to pet indulgence?

A: If you look at accounts of the pets owned by royalty and nobility back in the Middle Ages, you’ll find dogs and cats and monkeys and birds that were treated very, very well and fed very choice food. They weren’t dressed up for Halloween, because Halloween hadn’t been invented, but I think the habit of doing this is actually quite ancient. It’s much more widespread now just because people have the resources. But there are other trends going on as well. In the U.K., we are seeing that people are delaying having families. If it’s not possible for somebody to have a child, or they feel that they’re not ready because they haven’t achieved what they wanted in their career, or they can only afford a small apartment and feel that a child should have a house with a yard, then I think that gap can be filled by an animal for a few years. It’s a lot cheaper to buy your dog a Halloween costume than to get an apartment with one more room in it.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? For every paper that says that pets make you live longer, many other reports find no effect.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O For every paper that says that pets make you live longer, many other reports find no effect.

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