Abstract

There has been almost no research on associations of companion animals with quality of life in sexual minorities. Because gay and bisexual men have less social support than their heterosexual peers, some have argued that pet companionship could provide emotional support, while others have argued the opposite, that having a pet is another stressor. This analysis examines the association between having dogs, cats, both animals, or no animals and quality of life using the 12-item Short Form (SF-12) mental and physical composite quality of life scores for gay and bisexual prostate cancer survivors, post-treatment. Participants were 189 gay, bisexual, or other men who have sex with men, who completed online surveys in 2015. Linear regression analysis found that participants with cats and participants with dogs had lower mental quality of life scores than participants without pets. After adjustment for covariates, mental health scores remained significantly lower for cat owners, dog owners, and owners of both animals compared to those of participants who did not have pets. No differences were seen for physical quality of life scores after adjustment. We conclude that pet companionship may be a net stressor for gay and bisexual men following prostate cancer treatment. As this is the first study of pet companionship in sexual minorities, further research is needed to confirm the reliability of these findings, generalizability, and temporality of the association.

Highlights

  • There is almost no research on the health effects of companion animals in sexual minority populations and none in gay and bisexual men with prostate cancer

  • Because previous studies have shown both positive and negative health effects as well as no effects, we investigated what relations, if any, pet companionship has with quality of life outcomes in sexual minority prostate cancer survivors [7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16]

  • The Restore Study was an NIH-funded exploratory study to examine the incidence of clinical concerns in a cohort of gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men treated for prostate cancer, and to estimate the sexual dysfunction effects of treatment in this cohort [19]

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Summary

Introduction

There is almost no research on the health effects of companion animals in sexual minority populations and none in gay and bisexual men with prostate cancer. States population has companion animals, colloquially known as pets [1]. The two most popular companion animals are dogs and cats. 71% have dogs and 55% have cats [1]. Few organizations collect large-scale data about companion-ownership rates among sexual minorities. Community Marketing Inc. has conducted an annual lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)

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