Abstract

This study aimed to analyze the association between companion animal ownership, the sub-factors of this ownership (the species and number of owned pets), and overall life satisfaction (OLS). Data was obtained from the publicly available responses to the 2017 Seoul Survey, conducted among Seoul-based Korean locals aged ≥ 15 years (N = 42,687; pet owners = 8,708, non-owners = 33,979). Propensity score was calculated by performing logistic regressions with covariates and data was matched using the nearest-neighbor method. Further, multiple linear regression was performed to analyze this association using the matched data. Additionally, survey-weighted multiple regressions were performed: 1) within pet owners, and 2) after stratifying owners with the number of pets owned. Pet owners in Seoul, South Korea reported higher levels of OLS than non-owners, even after controlling for covariates—age, sex, marital status, family size, family income, job, education, types of housing, housing tenure. Owners with both dogs and cats showed the highest average OLS scores (owners with 2 pets: Mean [M] = 58.05, Standard Deviation [SD] = 0.67; owners with ≥ 3 pets: M = 59.03, SD = 1.02), followed by single pet owners of either a cat (M = 56.64, SD = 0.37) or a dog (M = 56.14, SD = 0.13). Single pet owners reported significantly higher levels of OLS than those with 2 or ≥ 3 pets when pet types were adjusted for. When owners had a single pet, pet types (dog or cat) did not generate a significant difference in OLS scores. Among owners with 2 or ≥ 3 pets, however, owners with both dogs and cats had higher OLS scores than dog owners. This research has significant implications for promoting future study on companion animal effects for improving human health and well-being. Mechanisms of the effect, including cultural factors, should be further investigated.

Highlights

  • This study aimed to examine the association between companion animal ownership and overall life satisfaction, one measure of human well-being, through the following hypotheses: 1) Companion animal owners in Seoul, South Korea will have higher overall life satisfaction scores than non-owners, and 2) Companion animal owners’ levels of overall life satisfaction will differ based on the species and number of pets they own

  • Companion animal ownership and overall life satisfaction data both from both local Koreans and foreigners, but we used the data obtained from the Korean sample only

  • This study analyzed the associations between companion animal ownership, sub-factors of this ownership, and overall life satisfaction, using the data of local Seoul citizens obtained from the 2017 Seoul Survey

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Summary

Introduction

Companion animal ownership and overall life satisfaction pet-related consumerism [1,2]. There is an increased interest in the effects of companion animal ownership on health and well-being to ensure a sound and healthy symbiosis of companion animals and their owners. The “companion animal effect” states that companion animals are positively associated with the owners’ physical, mental, and social health [4]; this hypothesis has been supported by several existing studies [5,6,7,8]. According to a Chinese study, pet ownership had a positive causal effect on human health [9]. A national representative longitudinal study in Germany and Australia revealed that owning a pet could reduce the number of visits to the doctor, even after minimizing confounding effects through the propensity score matching method [10]

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