| Literature DB >> 28234931 |
P Sandøe1,2, S V Kondrup1, P C Bennett3, B Forkman2, I Meyer2, H F Proschowsky4, J A Serpell5, T B Lund1.
Abstract
A number of dog breeds suffer from welfare problems due to extreme phenotypes and high levels of inherited diseases but the popularity of such breeds is not declining. Using a survey of owners of two popular breeds with extreme physical features (French Bulldog and Chihuahua), one with a high load of inherited diseases not directly related to conformation (Cavalier King Charles Spaniel), and one representing the same size range but without extreme conformation and with the same level of disease as the overall dog population (Cairn Terrier), we investigated this seeming paradox. We examined planning and motivational factors behind acquisition of the dogs, and whether levels of experienced health and behavior problems were associated with the quality of the owner-dog relationship and the intention to re-procure a dog of the same breed. Owners of each of the four breeds (750/breed) were randomly drawn from a nationwide Danish dog registry and invited to participate. Of these, 911 responded, giving a final sample of 846. There were clear differences between owners of the four breeds with respect to degree of planning prior to purchase, with owners of Chihuahuas exhibiting less. Motivations behind choice of dog were also different. Health and other breed attributes were more important to owners of Cairn Terriers, whereas the dog's personality was reported to be more important for owners of French Bulldogs and Cavalier King Charles Spaniels but less important for Chihuahua owners. Higher levels of health and behavior problems were positively associated with a closer owner-dog relationship for owners of Cavalier King Charles Spaniels and Chihuahuas but, for owners of French Bulldogs, high levels of problems were negatively associated with an intention to procure the same breed again. In light of these findings, it appears less paradoxical that people continue to buy dogs with welfare problems.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28234931 PMCID: PMC5325474 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mortality and morbidity characteristics from Agria breed profiles used to select the four study breeds.
| Breed | Relative Risk of death | Median age (years) at death ♂/♀ | Relative Risk of at least one VCE | Median age (Years) at first VCE ♂/♀ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All breeds | 1 | 6.6/7.0 | 1 | 4.9/5.6 |
| Cairn Terrier | 1 | 9.1/9.9 | 1 | 7.7/7.9 |
| Cavalier King Charles Spaniel | 1.3 | 7.8/7.9 | 1.2 | 4.6/5.4 |
| Chihuahua | 0.8 | 3.9/4.2 | 1 | 2.8/2.9 |
| French Bulldog | 1.2 | 2.5/3.8 | 1.9 | 1.6/1.8 |
* Relative risk compared to all breeds. Mortality rates include events where, most commonly, a veterinarian assigned the cause of death and some cases (generally acute or accidental death) where the owner and a witness confirmed the death of the dog.
** Relative risk of at least one Veterinary Care Event (VCE) compared to all breeds. A VCE represents a visit to the veterinarian where the cost exceeds the self-risk.
Overview of themes covered in the questionnaire.
| Overall theme | Details |
|---|---|
| Socio-demographic | • Gender |
| Pet career | • Pets in childhood |
| About the dog | • Breed |
| Welfare problems and veterinary assistance | • Welfare problems not requiring veterinary assistance |
| Choice and procurement of dog | • Who in household got the idea to procure the dog? |
| Expectations of a good dog | • Easy to train |
| Daily life with and care of dog | • Hours that the dog is alone on weekdays |
| Expenses of dog | • Type of insurance |
| LAPS questions | • Degree of attachment to dog |
| Other dog currently, earlier dogs, dogs in the future, other pets currently | • Other pets in household |
Dog owners’ experiences with frequently occurring health and behavior problems.
| Cairn Terrier (N = 288–295) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 212–219) | Chihuahua (N = 133–141) | French bulldog (N = 178–185) | Test Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vomiting and/or diarrhea | 11.2% | 6.4% | 7.8% | 21.3% | Chi2 test < 0.001 (24.70; 3; 838) |
| Skin changes, ear problems, itching, problems with the anal glands | 3.7% | 12.5% | 6.4% | 14.8% | Chi2 test < 0.001 (22.18; 3; 833) |
| Coughing, wheezing or strange breathing sounds | 4.4% | 4.6% | 16.3% | 14.8% | Chi2 test < 0.001 (29.84; 3; 834) |
| Cramps, unsteadiness, problems with balance | 0.3% | 0.5% | 2.2% | 0.5% | Chi2 test = 0.178 (4.91; 3; 835) |
| Behavioral problems such as aggression, uncleanliness, fear of noises or of being alone | 6.1% | 4.6% | 10.1% | 5.5% | Chi2 test = 0.192 (4.74; 3; 831) |
| Mean (s.d.) number of frequently occurring problems not requiring veterinary assistance | 0.25 (0.54) | 0.29 (0.55) | 0.42 (0.65) | 0.53 (0.80) | Wald Chi2 test< 0.001 (29.10; 3; 819) |
| Gastrointestinal problems (e.g. vomiting or diarrhea) | 0.7% | 2.3% | 0% | 1.6% | Chi2 test = 0.177 (4.93; 3; 838) |
| Skin problems (e.g. skin changes, itching, otitis, problems with the anal glands) | 3.0% | 9.2% | 2.9% | 9.2% | Chi2 test < 0.01 (14.51; 3; 838) |
| Respiratory problems (e.g. coughing, wheezing or strange breathing sounds) | 0.7% | 0.9% | 1.4% | 2.2% | Chi2 test = 0.499 (2.37; 3; 836) |
| Disease of the brain or in other parts of the nervous system (e.g. epilepsy, slipped disc) | 0.3% | 0.9% | 0% | 0% | Chi2 test = 0.378 (3.09; 3; 836) |
| Problems with the heart | 0.3% | 0.9% | 0% | 0% | Chi2 test = 0.382 (3.06; 3; 835) |
| Behavioral problems such as aggression, uncleanliness, fear of noises or of being alone | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | n.a. |
| Mean (s.d.) number of problems requiring veterinary assistance many times | 0.05 (0.23) | 0.14 (0.46) | 0.04 (0.24) | 0.13 (0.37) | Wald Chi2 test< 0.001 (16.58; 3; 829) |
| 0.30 (0.65) | 0.43 (0.49) | 0.47 (0.73) | 0.66 (0.99) | Wald Chi2 test< 0.001 (30.74; 3; 811) |
A Proportion responding that the dog “many times” had problems with the disease or behavior in question
B Composite scale of all problems not requiring assistance
C Proportion responding that the dog has been to a veterinarian “many times” because of the disease in question
D Composite scale of all problems requiring veterinary assistance
E Composite scale of all problems reported.
F Wald tests from poisson regression after adjusting for the dog’s age.
Overview of response rate and dog status.
| Cairn Terrier | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel | Chihuahua | French Bulldog | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total invited | 750 | 750 | 750 | 750 |
| Reached contact | 690 | 682 | 634 | 630 |
| Completed questionnaire | 309 | 228 | 148 | 198 |
| Response rate | 45% | 33% | 23% | 31% |
| Still has dog | 298 (96.4%) | 220 (96.5%) | 143 (96.6%) | 185 (93.4%) |
| Dog is dead | 8 (2.6%) | 7 (3.1%) | 3 (2.0%) | 13 (6.6%) |
| Not reported | 3 (1.0%) | 1 (0.4%) | 2 (1.4%) | 0 (0%) |
A After subtraction of owners in which the postal address supplied from Danish Dog Register was invalid.
Pre-purchase characteristics and point of purchase (in percent or means)–per dog type.
| Cairn Terrier (N = 298) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 220) | Chihuahua (N = 143) | French bulldog (N = 185) | Results of Chi2 Wald tests,p-value (chi2, df; N) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Choice of dog breed was incidental" | 5.4% | 6.4% | 11.9% | 3.8% | < 0.05 (7.92; 3; 805) |
| "There wasn't really any planning" | 14.4% | 12.3% | 28.0% | 15.1% | < 0.01 (13.93; 3; 805) |
| Mean (s.d.) From books/professional advice | 0.33 (0.7) | 0.57 (0.8) | 0.24 (0.5) | 0.48 (0.7) | < 0.001 (31.81; 3; 805) |
| “Friends/colleagues/family recommended this breed” | 16.8% | 20.0% | 13.3% | 11.9% | 0.202 (4.62; 3; 805) |
| “I have had this dog breed before” | 43,0% | 20,9% | 11,9% | 13,0% | < 0.001 (58.87; 3; 805) |
| From a breeder with several breeding dogs | 58.1% | 52.3% | 32.2% | 34.6% | < 0.001 (39.83; 3; 815) |
| From a breeder / family with only the bitch who is the mother of the dog | 32.2% | 35.9% | 32.9% | 40.5% | 0.377 (3.10; 3; 815) |
| I / we got the dog from a previous owner | 6.0% | 10.0% | 21.7% | 14.6% | < 0.001 (26.49; 3; 805) |
| Other (includes: raised it myself, from abroad, from shelter, other, don’t know) | 4.4% | 5.5% | 14.7% | 11.9% | < 0.001 (22.07; 3; 805) |
* Wald chi2 tests from Generalized Linear Models (GLM) (using binomial logit link and poisson logit link in the case of ‘From books/professional advice’) as to whether there is significant difference between owners of the four dog breeds. Control variables included in the GLMs were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
A This was a multiple response question, so percentages sum to more than 100.
Factors that are important when choosing a dog.
| To what degree did the following factors affect the choice of your dog? | Distinctive appearance | Breed attributes | Convenience |
|---|---|---|---|
| The dog’s facial expression | .884 | ||
| The dog's overall appearance | .857 | ||
| The dog was different/unique | .608 | ||
| The color of the dog | .698 | ||
| The dog’s breed | -.750 | ||
| The characteristics / behavior of the breed | -.821 | ||
| The health of the breed | -.749 | ||
| It was easy to find a dog of this breed | .795 | ||
| The dog was a bargain (it was a fair price) | .853 |
Results from principal component analyses (pattern matrix from direct oblimin rotation) (N = 821). Factor loadings below 0.300 are not reported.
Motivational factors for owners’ choice of dog breed–per dog type.
| Cairn terrier (N = 290–297) | Cavalier King Charles spaniel (N = 214–218) | Chihuahua (N = 136–141) | French bulldog (N = 182) | Results of Chi2 Wald tests, p-value (chi2, df; N) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| avg. | s.d. | avg. | s.d. | avg. | s.d. | avg. | s.d. | ||
| Distinctive appearance of the dog | 3.76 | (1.27) | 4.16 | (1.39) | 3.84 | (1.62) | 4.02 | (1.46) | < 0.01 (12.35; 3; 787) |
| Breed attributes | 4.10 | (.82) | 4.00 | (.81) | 3.41 | (1.19) | 3.88 | (0.84) | < 0.001 (52.82; 3; 793) |
| Convenience | 2.49 | (1.13) | 2.59 | (1.09) | 2.62 | (1.29) | 2.39 | (1.06) | 0.331 (3.43; 3; 793) |
| The dogs' personality | 4.19 | (0.99) | 4.44 | (0.98) | 3.89 | (1.36) | 4.37 | (1.02) | < 0.001 (19.62; 3; 808) |
* Wald chi2 tests from GLMs (using normally distributed identity link) as to whether there is significant difference between owners of the four dog breeds. Control variables included in the GLMs were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
Expenditure on veterinary treatment during the last year–per dog type.
| Cairn Terrier (N = 281) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 207) | Chihuahua (N = 130) | French bulldog (N = 174) | Results of Chi2 Wald tests p-value (chi2, df; N) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–999 DKR (0–150 USD) | 52.7% | 36.2% | 36.9% | 34.5% | < 0.01 (13.39; 3; 805) |
| 1000–4999 DKR (151–759 USD) | 44.1% | 57.5% | 60.8% | 53.4% | |
| 5000 DKR or more (760 USD or more) | 3.2% | 6.3% | 2.3% | 12.1% |
* Wald chi2 tests from Generalized Linear Models (with cumulative logit link)) as to whether there is significant difference between owners of the four dog breeds. Control variables included in the GLM were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
A Response to the question: “How much money do you usually spend on veterinary bills (if your dog is insured, please state the amount you spent, before the bills were paid by the insurance company)”
LAPS score–per dog type.
| Cairn terrier (N = 296) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 214) | Chihuahua (N = 137) | French bulldog (N = 182) | Results of Chi2 Wald tests p-value (chi2, df; N) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| avg. | (s.d.) | avg. | (s.d.) | avg. | (s.d.) | avg. | (s.d.) | ||
| LAPS overall score | 60.5 | (16.0) | 64.9 | (16.2) | 69.2 | (14.3) | 65.1 | (14.8) | <0.01 (15.82; 3; 794) |
* Wald chi2 tests from GLM (using normally distributed identity link) as to whether there is significant difference between owners of the four dog breeds. Control variables included in the GLM were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
The influence of dog breed, extent of health/behavioral problems, motivational factors behind choice of dog, and engagement with dog on the quality of the owner-dog relationship (based on the LAPS where higher scores indicate higher quality)–results from GLM (dependent variable: LAPS) (N = 759)*.
| Coeff. | Std. Error | Wald chi2 | Sig. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Constant) | 41.24 | 4.25 | 94.29 | <0.001 |
| Cavalier King Charles Spaniel | 3.67 | 1.33 | 7.66 | <0.01 |
| Chihuahua | 4.82 | 1.71 | 7.95 | <0.01 |
| French Bulldogs | 1.85 | 1.46 | 1.61 | .205 |
| 0.93 | 0.66 | 2.01 | .157 | |
| Convenience | 0.50 | 0.47 | 1.11 | .293 |
| Distinctive appearance | 1.59 | 0.53 | 9.12 | <0.01 |
| Breed attributes | 1.77 | 0.64 | 7.69 | <0.01 |
| Expenditure on veterinary assistance (ref: “0–999 DKR” (0–150 USD)) | ||||
| 1000–4999 DKR (151–759 USD) | 1.75 | 1.09 | 2.55 | .110 |
| 5000 DKR or more (760 USD or more) | 4.47 | 2.37 | 3.56 | .059 |
| Expenditure not reported | -0.44 | 2.35 | 0.03 | .853 |
| Respondent not mainly responsible for the dog (ref: “no”) | -2.56 | 2.48 | 1.07 | .301 |
| Others in household have most contact with the dog (ref: “no”) | -5.56 | 1.99 | 7.81 | <0.01 |
* Results are from GLM (using normally distributed identity link). Control variables included but not reported in the GLM were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
Plan to acquire a new dog after the current dog.
| Cairn Terrier (N = 298) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 220) | Chihuahua (N = 143) | French bulldog (N = 185) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes, for sure the same breed | 20.1% | 22.3% | 17.5% | 29.2% |
| Yes, maybe the same breed | 19.5% | 24.1% | 21.0% | 28.1% |
| Yes, but not the same breed (or not decided) | 9.1% | 8.6% | 24.5% | 10.3% |
| No, no plan to acquire new dog | 21.1% | 15.0% | 14.0% | 5.4% |
| Don’t know whether a new dog will be acquired | 30.2% | 30.0% | 23.1% | 27.0% |
Test statistics from multinominal logit regression after adjustment for gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density: Chi2 29.37 (d.f. 12); p<0.01.
GLM results regarding what explains plans to acquire the same breed (“yes, for sure”)*.
| Cairn Terrier (N = 281) | Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (N = 204) | Chihuahua (N = 113) | French bulldog (N = 170) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coeff. | Wald chi2 | Sig. | Coeff. | Wald chi2 | Sig. | Coeff. | Wald chi2 | Sig. | Coeff. | Wald chi2 | Sig. | |
| (Intercept) | -27.08 | 0.00 | 1.00 | -4.10 | 6.50 | <0.05 | -5.08 | 3.74 | 0.053 | -6.50 | 11.17 | <0.001 |
| Number of frequently occurring health and behavior problems | -0.09 | 0.11 | 0.74 | -0.11 | 0.24 | 0.63 | -0.50 | 0.97 | 0.32 | -0.59 | 5.85 | 0.02 |
| LAPS score | 0.04 | 12.17 | <0.001 | 0.02 | 2.47 | 0.12 | 0.04 | 1.71 | 0.19 | 0.06 | 10.61 | <0.01 |
* Wald chi2 tests from Generalized Linear Models (using logit link) whether there is significant difference between owners of the four dog breeds. Control variables included in the GLMs were gender and age of the respondent, age of the dog, education, household type, type of living residence, and population density.
Fig 1Predicted probability for acquisition of same dog breed.
Predicted probability for responding “yes, for sure” regarding acquisition of same dog breed among owners of French Bulldogs.