| Literature DB >> 35816194 |
Benedikt Kretzler1, Hans-Helmut König2, André Hajek2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Several publications explored a relationship between pet ownership and lower levels of loneliness and social isolation. However, to the best of our knowledge, no systematic review has yet synthesized the evidence on these associations. Thus, this systematic review aims to evaluate the findings regarding the relations between pet ownership, loneliness, and social isolation.Entities:
Keywords: Animal ownership; Loneliness; Pet ownership; Social exclusion; Social isolation; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35816194 PMCID: PMC9272860 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-022-02332-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.519
Search algorithm (PubMed)
| #1 | Loneliness |
| #2 | Social isolation |
| #3 | Social exclusion |
| #4 | Social frailty |
| #5 | #1 OR #2 OR #3 OR #4 |
| #6 | Pet ownership |
| #7 | Dog |
| #8 | Cat |
| #9 | “Animal owner*” |
| #10 | #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 |
| #11 | #5 AND #10 |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Quality assessment
| Paper author and date | (1) Was the research question or objective in this paper clearly stated? | (2) Was the study population clearly specified and defined? | (3) Was the participation rate of eligible persons at least 50%? | (4) Were all the subjects selected or recruited from the same or similar populations (including the same time period)? Were inclusion and exclusion criteria for being in the study prespecified and applied uniformly to all participants? | (5) Was a sample size justification, power description, or variance and effect estimates provided? | (6) For the analyses in this paper, were the exposure(s) of interest measured prior to the outcome(s) being measured? (If not prospective should be answered as ‘no’, even is exposure predated outcome) | (7) Was the timeframe sufficient so that one could reasonably expect to see an association between exposure and outcome if it existed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antonacopoulos (2010) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Antonacopoulos (2017) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Bennett (2015) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Black (2012) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Branson (2019) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | Yes | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Carr (2021) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (simultaneously) | Yes |
| Carr (2020) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (simultaneously) | Yes |
| Charmaraman (2020) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Enmarker (2015) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Gulick (2012) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Hajek (2020) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Kogan (2021) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| McConnell (2011) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Mueller (2021) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Oliva (2021) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Phillipou (2021) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Pikhartova (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (simultaneously) | Yes |
| Powell (2018) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Ratschen (2020) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Rhoades (2015) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Rijken (2011) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Stanley (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Not reported | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Taniguchi (2018) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
| Zasloff (1994) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No (cross-sectional) | No (cross-sectional) |
Key findings
| First author | Country | Assessment of pet ownership | Assessment of loneliness or social isolation | Study type | Sample characteristics | Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample description | Sample size | Age | Females in total sample (%) | ||||||
| Adult population prior to the pandemic | |||||||||
| Antonacopoulos (2010) [ | Canada | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (Version 3) (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Individuals who are living alone | M: 39.4 SD: 14.4 18–78 | 73.3 | According to hierarchical regression, there was no significant association between pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) and loneliness However, pet ownership × social support was associated with decreased levels of loneliness ( | |
| Antonacopoulos (2017) [ | Canada | Having acquired a dog (dichotomous) | Feelings of loneliness during the last week, rated on a four-point scale UCLA Loneliness Scale (Version 3) (20 items) | Longitudinal (two waves during 8 months) | Individuals who are living in a town and do not have a dog at the baseline | M: 36.8 SD: 14.4 18–68 | 64.0 | Regarding the UCLA Loneliness Scale, acquiring a dog (ref.: not acquiring a dog) was not related to diverging levels of loneliness With respect to the single item, ANOVA revealed that acquiring a dog (ref.: not acquiring a dog) was associated with decreased levels of loneliness ( | |
| Bennett (2015) [ | Australia | Pet ownership (dichotomous) Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale-Revised (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Community-dwelling individuals | M: 71.6 SD: 5.6 65–80 | 72.1 | ||
| Branson (2019) [ | United States | Cat ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale Revised (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Community-dwelling individuals without a dog | M: 76.6 SD: 9.5 60–100 | 74.0 | Logistic regression did not detect loneliness as a significant covariate of cat ownership (ref.: non-cat ownership) | |
| Carr (2020) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) × social loss (dichotomous) | Composite measure (UCLA Loneliness Scale, Health and Retirement Study Psychosocial and Lifestyle Questionnaire) (three items) | Longitudinal (three waves during 8 years) | Health and Retirement Study | M: 65.6 SD: 10.1 37–88 | 56 | Pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) did not significantly affect changes in loneliness following a social loss | |
| Enmarker (2015) [ | Norway | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | Loneliness: four-point scale | Cross-sectional | Nord-Trøndelag Health Study | M: 74.8 SD: 6.5 65–101 | 54.3 | “There was a slight difference in pet ownership in relation to loneliness: 16.5% of participants who indicated that they were lonely owned a pet compared with 18% of participants who indicated that they were not lonely.” | |
| Gulick (2012) [ | United States | Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Individuals who own a dog or cat, utilize services for older people and can communicate in English | 55–72: 50.9% 73–84: 49.1% | 100.0 | There were no significant differences among loneliness between cat and dog owners | |
| Hajek (2020) [ | Germany | Dog ownership (dichotomous) cat ownership (dichotomous) | Loneliness: De Jong Gierveld Loneliness Scale (11 items) Social isolation: scale from Bude & Lantermann, 2006 (four items) | Cross-sectional | German Ageing Survey | M: 75.1 SD: 6.4 65–95 | 65.4 | Linear regression showed that dog ownership (ref.: not owning a pet) was related to decreased levels of social isolation ( | |
| McConnell (2011) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Community sample | M: 31 SD not specified Range not specified | 79 | Regarding | |
| Pikhartova (2014) [ | United Kingdom | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | Revised UCLA Loneliness Scale (three items) | Longitudinal (five waves during 9 years) | English Longitudinal Study of Ageing | M: 61.4 SD not specified Range not specified | 55.8 | According to logistic regression, pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was associated with increased odds of loneliness in the cross-sectional analysis (OR: 1.24, 95% CI: 1.06–1.47) In the longitudinal analysis, pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was also related to higher chances of loneliness (e.g., wave 0 to wave 5: OR: 1.31, 95% CI: 1.03–1.68) | |
| Powell (2018) [ | Australia | Dog ownership (current or past or not) | Expectation that dog ownership would result in a decrease among loneliness | Cross-sectional | Potential dog owners | 18–44: 52.0% 45–64: 39.0% ≥ 65: 9.0% | 85.0 | According to logistic regression, current dog ownership (ref.: never owned a dog) was significantly related to higher expectations that a dog benefits to a decrease in loneliness (OR: 1.61, 95% CI: 1.19–2.20). Past dog ownership remained insignificant | |
| Rijken (2011) [ | Netherlands | Pet ownership (dichotomous) Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) Dog and cat ownership (dichotomous) Other pet ownership (no cats or dogs) (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale Revised (six items) | Cross-sectional | National Panel of People with Chronic Illness or Disability | M: 74.6 SD: 6.4 Range not specified | 60.0 | With respect to ANOVA, there were no significant differences between the different types of pet ownership among loneliness | |
| Stanley (2014) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | Felts of loneliness during the last 2 weeks (dichotomized) | Cross-sectional | Primary care patients | M: 72.2 SD: 8.3 Range not specified | 57.8 | According to logistic regression, pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was not significantly associated with loneliness Though, living alone x pet ownership was significantly related to decreased odds of loneliness (OR: 0.20, 95% CI: 0.08–0.50) | |
| Taniguchi (2018) [ | Japan | Pet ownership (current or past vs. not) | Social isolation: having contact with others less than once a week | Cross-sectional | Ota Genki Senior Project | 65–74: 47.7% 75–84: 52.3% | 51.6 | Referring to mixed-effects cumulative logistic regression models, social isolation was related to decreased chances of current or past pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) (OR: 0.74, 95% CI: 0.66–0.80) | |
| Zasloff (1994) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale-Revised (number of items not specified) | Cross-sectional | Single students who do not live with a mate, a significant other, or children under the age of 18 | M: 28.4 SD: 8.3 21–53 | 100.0 | There were no significant differences in loneliness among pet owners and non-pet owners | |
| Children/adolescent prior to the pandemic | |||||||||
| Black (2012) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale Revised (20 items) | Cross-sectional | Rural adolescents who visit public high schools | M: 15.8 SD: 1.3 13–19 | 54.1 | An ANOVA showed that individuals with pets (ref.: non-pet ownership) had significantly lower loneliness scores ( | |
| Charmaraman (2020) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) dog ownership (dichotomous) | Social isolation: two items | Cross-sectional | Middle school students | M: 12.7 SD not specified 11–16 | 52 | Social isolation was negatively associated with dog ownership ( | |
| Mueller (2021) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) Dog ownership (dichotomous) | Three-point scale | Longitudinal (two waves in 10 months) | Adolescents visiting Middle schools | M: 12.69 SD: 1.21 | 50 | Dog ownership (ref.: non-dog pet ownership) was related to decreased levels of loneliness ( | |
| Rhoades (2015) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (three items) | Cross-sectional | Homeless youth who utilize drop-in centers | M: 21.3 SD: 2.1 Range not specified | 27.4 | Regarding Chi-square tests, pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was associated with decreased levels of loneliness ( | |
| Adult population during the pandemic | |||||||||
| Carr (2021) [ | United States | Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) | Composite measure (UCLA Loneliness Scale, Health and Retirement Study Psychosocial and Lifestyle Questionnaire) (three items) | Longitudinal (two waves during 2 years) | Community-based sample | M: 69.4 SD: 6.1 60–92 | 66.0 | According to the fully adjusted regression model, neither dog ownership (ref.: non-dog ownership) nor cat ownership (ref.: non-cat ownership) was significantly associated with loneliness | |
| Kogan (2021) [ | Mostly United States | Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) | Loneliness: five-point scale Social isolation: five-point scale | Cross-sectional | Dog or cat owners who participated in an online survey | ≤ 39: 30% 40–59: 43% ≥ 60: 27% | 89 | Most of the pet owners reported that their pet would decrease their loneliness (66%) and their feelings of isolation (64%) Regarding binary regression, cat owners were less likely to feel isolated than dog owners (OR: 0.74, 95% CI: 0.64–0.86). Concerning loneliness, there no significant differences between these groups were revealed | |
| Oliva (2021) [ | Australia | Dog ownership (dichotomous) Cat ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (three items) Loneliness during COVID-19 lockdown, rated on a four-point scale | Cross-sectional | Individuals living alone | M: 50.9 SD: 15.1 23–89 | 85.4 | Referring to hierarchical logistic regression, dog ownership (ref.: non-dog ownership) was associated with decreased levels of loneliness among both measures (e.g., UCLA Loneliness Scale: | |
| Phillipou (2021) [ | Australia | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale-Revised (number of items not specified) | Cross-sectional | Covid-19 and you: mentaL heaLth in AusTralia now survEy | M: 25.1 SD: 14.2 range not specified | 84.2 | Pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was not significantly related to loneliness | |
| Ratschen (2020) [ | United Kingdom | Pet ownership (dichotomous) | UCLA Loneliness Scale (three items) | Cross-sectional | General population | 18–24: 7.1% 25–34: 17.5% 35–44: 16.8% 45–54: 23.8% 55–64: 22.2% 65–70: 7.1% ≥ 70: 5.6% | 78.6 | Looking at linear regression models, pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was associated with a decreased height of loneliness ( | |
| Children/adolescent during the pandemic | |||||||||
| Mueller (2021) [ | United States | Pet ownership (dichotomous) Dog ownership (dichotomous) | Three-point scale | Longitudinal (two waves in 10 months) | Adolescents visiting Middle schools | M: 12.69 SD: 1.21 | 50 | Pet ownership (ref.: non-pet ownership) was significantly associated with increased loneliness during COVID-19 ( Pet owners (ref.: non-pet owners) reported significantly higher increases in loneliness during COVID-19 ( | |