| Literature DB >> 32429543 |
Kenta Miyake1, Kumiko Kito2, Ayaka Kotemori1,3, Kazuto Sasaki4, Junpei Yamamoto1,3, Yuko Otagiri5, Miho Nagasawa3,6, Sayaka Kuze-Arata3,6, Kazutaka Mogi3,6, Takefumi Kikusui3,6, Junko Ishihara1,3.
Abstract
Obesity is a major risk factor for lifestyle-related diseases, including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and hypertension. Several studies have investigated the association between pet ownership and obesity, but the findings have been inconsistent. This systematic literature review and meta-analysis assessed the association between pet ownership and obesity. Using PubMed and Scopus, we overviewed the literature published until December 2019 and selected pertinent data for meta-analysis. Two independent reviewers extracted the data. Pooled relative risks (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for obesity were calculated using the random-effects model with inverse-variance weighting. The 21 included articles were cross-sectional studies. Five publications (nine analyses) that reported adjusted RRs for BMI ≥ 25 were included in the meta-analysis. No significant association existed between pet ownership and obesity (pooled RR = 1.038; 95% CI, 0.922-1.167; I2 = 51.8%). After stratification by age group (children vs. adults), no significant association was detected (pooled RR = 0.844; 95% CI, 0.604-1.179; I2 = 64.1% vs. pooled RR = 1.099; 95% CI, 0.997-1.212; I2 = 25.2%). Similarly, no significant association was observed between dog ownership and obesity, indicating no association between pet ownership and obesity. However, no infer causation can be reported because all studies included in this meta-analysis were cross-sectional. Therefore, further prospective studies are needed.Entities:
Keywords: companion animals; obesity; pet ownership
Year: 2020 PMID: 32429543 PMCID: PMC7277191 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17103498
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flowchart of the literature review.
Characteristics of the included studies in systematic review.
| Reference | Title | Author, Year, | Country | Study Design | Pet Type | N (Pet Owner:Non-Pet Owner) | Percentage of Men (Pet Owner:Non-Pet Owner) | Mean Age (SD) (Pet Owner:Non-Pet Owner) | Outcome Measure | Findings | Adjusted Variables | Quality Assessment Selection (0–4 Stars) Comparability (0–2 Stars) Outcome (0–3 Stars) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Does Dog Ownership Affect Physical Activity, Sleep, and Self-Reported Health in Older Adults? | Mičková, E. et al., 2019 | Czechia | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 44 (26:18) | 41 | 68(5.4):71(5.5) | BMI (Mean) | Mean (SD) of BMI in non-dog owners and dog owners, respectively; 28.8 (5.4), 26.1 (4.1); | - | Selection (★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Pet ownership and the risk of dying from lung cancer, findings from an 18 year follow-up of a US national cohort | Adhikari, A. et al, 2019 | United States | NHANESⅢ | Pet | 13,725 (5902:7823) | 48.4 | 43.3 | BMI (%) | Pet owner’s BMI distribution in men and women, respectively; Underweight; 1.05%, 3.39% Normal weight; 37.71%, 40.62% Overweight; 39.95%, 27.71% Obese; 21.29%, 28.28% No significant differences were obwerved between pet owners and non-pet owners by chi-square test ( | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | The association between dog ownership or dog walking and fitness or weight status in childhood. | Westgarth, C. et al, 2017 | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 798 (295:503) | - | 9–10 years | BMI (OR) | Dog onwership and "overweight or obese"; Model 1; OR = 1.04 (95%CI; 0.67, 1.60) Model 2; OR = 1.05 (95%CI; 0.62, 1.77) Dog onwership and obese; Model 1; OR = 1.60 (95%CI; 0.80, 3.20) Model 2; OR=1.09 (95%CI; 0.43, 2.79) | Model 1; gender, developmental age, Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007Model 2; gender, developmental age, Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007, positive food score and negative food score | Selection (★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★★) |
| [ | Interactions between Neighbourhood Urban Form and Socioeconomic Status and Their Associations with Anthropometric Measurements in Canadian Adults. | McCormack, G.R. et al, 2017 | Canada | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 851 (278:573) | 37.6 | 52.8 (14.3) | Waist circumference (β) Waist-to-hip ratio (β) BMI (β) | Non-dog ownership and Waist circumference; Model 2; β = −0.02 (95%CI; −1.48, 1.45) Non-dog ownership and Waist-to-hip ratio; Model 2; β = −0.27 (95%CI; −1.77, 1.23) Non-dog ownership and BMI; Model 2; β = −0.05 (95%CI; −0.68, 0.59) | Model 2; neighbourhood street pattern and neighbourhood level socioeconomic status plus all sociodemographic and health variables | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Dog Walking, the Human-Animal Bond and Older Adults’ Physical Health. | Curl, A.L. et al, 2017 | United States | The Health and Retirement Study | Dog | 771 (271:500) | 51.66: 46.58 | 67.03 (10.64) | BMI (%) | Mean (SD) of BMI;Dog non-owners; 28.41 (0.33) Dog owners non-dog walking; 29.43 (0.64) Dog owners dog walking; 27.84(0.48) Multivariate results indicated that dog ownership was not associated with better physical health and health behaviors (data not shown). | age, household income, gender, race, ethnicity, years of education, and marital status. | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★) |
| [ | Pet Ownership and Cancer Risk in the Women’s Health Initiative. | Garcia, D.O. et al., 2016 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Dog, cat, bird | 123,560 (41,607:81,953) Dog; 20,981 Cat; 19,288 Bird; 1338 | 0 | Dog owner; 61.7 (7.0) Cat owner; 61.8 (7.1) Bird owner; 62.3 (7.4) No-pets; 64.1 (7.1) | BMI (Mean and %) | Mean (SD) of BMI in no pets, dog(s), cat(s), bird(s), respectively; 27.8 (5.8), 28.3 (6.0), 27.8 (6.0), 28.5 (6.1) BMI (%) in no pets, dog(s), cat(s), bird(s), respectively; <25; 36.0%, 32.6%, 37.2%, 32.0% 25-29.9; 35.1%, 34.9%, 33.9%, 34.1% ≥30; 28.9%, 32.6%, 28.9%, 33.8% | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Dog walking among adolescents: Correlates and contribution to physical activity | Engelberg, J.K. et al., 2016 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 925 (484:441) | 47.1: 52.2 | Dog owners;(non-walk: walk) 14.16 (1.45): 14.02 (1.39)Non-dogs; 14.12 (1.37) | BMI (CDC) | Mean (95% CI) CDC Age adjusted BMI Percentiles; Dog non-owners; 66.53 (63.48, 69.57) Dog owners non-dog walking; 64.86 (59.15, 68.90) Dog owners dog walking; 65.21 (61.64, 68.77) | adolescent age, gender, race/ethnicity, parent marital status, parent education and house type | Selection (★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Pet dogs and children’s health: Opportunities for chronic disease prevention? | Gadomski, A.M. et al, 2015 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 643 (470:133) | 54.9: 54.9 | 6.72: 6.71 | BMI (%) | BMI distribution in pet owners and non-pet owners, respectively; Nomal; 65.8%, 66.5% Overweight; 17.7%, 15.8% Obese; 16.6%, 17.7% No significant differences were obwerved between pet owners and non-pet owners by chi-square test ( | - | Selection (★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★) |
| [ | Understanding the relationship between dog ownership and children’s physical activity and sedentary behaviour. | Christian, H. et al, 2012 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 1218 (729:489) | 47.7:48.5 | 11(0.8): 11(0.8) | BMI (%) | Overweight or obese BMI (%) in dog owners and non-dog owners, respectively; All children; 23.3, 23.3 Boys; 22.1, 23.3 Girls; 24.6, 23.3 | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Health in older cat and dog owners: The Nord-Trondelag Health Study (HUNT)-3 study. | Enmarker, I. et al, 2012 | Norway | Cross-sectional study | Dog, cat | 12,297 (2358:9939) | 51.4:44.7 | 65–101 years | BMI (Mean) | Mean (SD) of BMI in non-pet owners, cat owners, dog owners, respectively; 26.96 (5.69), 27.88 (4.88), 27.53 (4.50); | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Is childhood obesity influenced by dog ownership? No cross-sectional or longitudinal evidence. | Westgarth, C. et al, 2012 | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 6634 (1391:5243) | 50.9 | 7 years | BMI (OR) | Dog ownership and overweight or obese; Crude; OR = 1.11 (95%CI; 0.95, 1.29) Model 1; OR = 1.11 (95%CI; 0.92, 1.35) Model 2; OR = 1.07 (95%CI; 0.86, 1.34) Dog ownership and obese; Crude; OR = 1.33 (95%CI; 1.08, 1.63) Model 1; OR = 1.30 (95%CI; 1.00, 1.70) Model 2; OR = 1.18 (95%CI; 0.88, 1.59) | Model 1: concurrent ownership of bird, fish, ‘other’ pet, number of people in household, presence of an older sibling, maternal social class, paternal social class, paternal education, maternal age at delivery, house type, whether mother owned pets as a child Model 2: Model 1 + maternal education, maternal social class, maternal smoking during pregnancy, parental obesity, gender of child, birth weight, TV watching at 38 months, sleep duration at 30 months | Selection (★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★★) |
| [ | Dog ownership during pregnancy, maternal activity, and obesity: a cross-sectional study. | Westgarth, C. et al, 2012 | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 13,215 (7670:5545) | 0 | Adult | BMI (OR) | Dog ownership and overweight or obese; Crude; OR = 1.18 (95%CI; 1.06, 1.30) Adjusted; OR = 1.07 (95%CI; 0.93, 1.24) Dog ownership and obese; Crude; OR = 1.31 (95%CI; 1.10, 1.57) Adjusted; OR = 0.97 (95%CI; 0.74, 1.27) | Adjusted:maternal education, maternal social class, mother worked during pregnancy, maternal age at delivery, previous living children, number of people in household, house type, mother had pets as a child. | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | The influence of the built environment, social environment and health behaviors on body mass index. results from RESIDE. | Christian, H. et al, 2011 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 1551 (682 869) | 41 | 40 (11.7) | BMI (β) | Dog ownership and BMI; β = −0.085 ( | Significant socio-demographic variables (sex, age, education, work hours per week, children at home, number of adults living in the house). | Selection (★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Pet ownership and adolescent health: cross-sectional population study. | Mathers, M. et al, 2010 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Pet | 928 (823:105) | 50.2 | 15.9 (1.2) | BMI (%) | BMI distribution in pet owners and non-pet owners, respectively; Nomal; 74.1%, 72.4% Overweight; 20.4%, 17.1% Obese; 5.5%, 10.5% | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Physical activity, weight status, and neighborhood characteristics of dog walkers. | Coleman, K.J. et al, 2008 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 2199 (616:1583) | 52 | 45 (11) | BMI (%) | BMI distribution in non-pet owners (NO), pet owners non-walkers (ONW), and pet owners walkers (OW), respectively; Overweight; 34%, 34%, 43% Obese; 22%, 28%, 17% Significant Differences; Overweight; NO<ONW<OWO bese; OW<NO<ONW | - | Selection (★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Is dog ownership or dog walking associated with weight status in children and their parents? | Timperio, A. et al, 2008 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 5–6 years; 281 10–12 years; 864 | - | - | BMI (OR) | Dog ownership and overweight or obese; 5–6 years Model 1; OR = 0.7 (95%CI; 0.4, 1.4) Model 2; OR = 0.5 (95%CI; 0.3, 0.8) 10–12 years Model 1; OR = 0.9 (95%CI; 0.6, 1.2) Model 2; OR = 0.8 (95%CI; 0.5, 1.2) | Model 1:sex, and clustering by school only. Model 2:sex, physical activity, mother’s abd father’s weight status, matermal education, neightbourhood SES and clustering by school only. | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★★) |
| [ | Mother; 1108 Father; 947 | - | - | BMI(OR) | Dog ownership and overweight or obese; Mothers; Model 1; OR = 1.2 (95%CI; 0.9, 1.5) Model 2; OR = 1.1 (95%CI; 0.9, 1.5) Fathers; Model 1; OR = 1.3 (95%CI; 0.96, 1.7) Model 2; OR = 1.1 (95%CI; 0.9, 1.5) | Model 1:clustering by school only. Model 2:physical activity, education, neightbourhood SES and clustering by school only. | Selection (★★★) Comparability (★★) Outcome (★★) | |||||
| [ | Pet ownership and blood pressure in old age. | Wright, J.D. et al, 2007 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Pet | 1,179 (354:825) | 45.2: 41.0 | 64.3: 73.0 | BMI (Mean) | Mean BMI; Non-pet owners; 25.4 Pet owners: 25.7 | age | Selection (★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | To have or not to have a pet for better health? | Koivusilta, L.K. et al, 2006 | Finland | Cross-sectional study | Pet | 21,101 (8503:11,917) | 39.4:42.1 | Adult | BMI (%) | BMI distribution in pet owners and non-pet owners, respectively; ≥27; 26%, 21% <27; 74%, 79% Significant difference was observed by chi-square test ( | - | Selection (★★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Dog ownership, walking behavior, and maintained mobility in late life | Thorpe, Jr. R.J. et al, 2006 | United States | Cross-sectional study | Dog | 2533 (394:2137) | 54.3:47.2 | Non-dog owner (walked); 75.3 (2.9) Non-dog owner (did not walk); 75.8 (2.9) Dog owner (walked dog); 75.3 (2.6) Dog owner (did not walk dog); 75.3 (2.8) | BMI (%) | Obese (BMI >= 30); Non-dog owner (walked); 18.5 Non-dog owner (did not walk); 24.6 Dog owner (walked dog); 16.9 Dog owner (did not walk dog); 29.4 | - | Selection (★★★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★) |
| [ | Pet ownership and risk factors for cardiovascular disease: another look | Parslow, R.A. et al, 2003 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Pet | 5079 (2895:2184) | - | adult | BMI (OR) | Pet ownership and overweight; Age 40–44 years; OR = 1.30 (95%CI; 1.08, 1.55) Age 60–64 years; OR = 0.98 (95%CI; 0.83, 1.15) Pet ownership and obese; OR = 1.16 (95%CI; 1.00, 1.34) | age, sex and education or subgroups of these variables where appropriate. | Selection(★★★) Comparability(★★) Outcome(★★) |
| [ | Pet ownership and risk factors for cardiovascular disease. | Anderson, W.P. et al, 1992 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Pet | 5741 (784:4957) | 59.1 | 20–59 years | BMI (Mean) | Mean (SD) of BMI in pet owners and non-petowners, respectively; Men; 25.4 (3.1), 25.5 (3.3), | - | Selection (★) Comparability (-) Outcome (★★★) |
NHANES III, The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; BMI, Body Mass Index; OR, Odds Ratio; SD, Standard deviation; CI, Confidence Interval; CDC, Centre for Disease Control.
Figure 2Overall meta-analysis of the association between pet ownership and obesity risk (body mass index ≥ 25). CI, Confidence Interval; OR, Odds Ratio.
Figure 3Meta-analysis of the association between pet ownership and obesity risk (body mass index ≥ 25) in adults. CI, Confidence Interval; OR, Odds Ratio.
Figure 4Meta-analysis of the association between pet (dog) ownership and obesity risk (body mass index ≥ 25) in children. CI, Confidence Interval; OR, Odds Ratio.
Figure 5Meta-analysis of the association between dog ownership and obesity risk (body mass index ≥ 25). CI, Confidence Interval; OR, Odds Ratio.
Figure 6Meta-analysis of the association between dog ownership and obesity risk (body mass index ≥ 25) in adults. CI, Confidence Interval; OR, Odds Ratio.