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Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pet cats need their humans for shelter, food, water, and company while, humans are responsible for providing such standard of care so as to ensure good health and welfare of their animals. This study investigated if owners’ beliefs and perceptions of pet cats’ needs and selected beha...

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Autores principales: Naughton, Violetta, Grzelak, Teresa, Mulhern, Maria S., Moffett, Charlotte R., Naughton, Patrick J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9559292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36230386
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12192645
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author Naughton, Violetta
Grzelak, Teresa
Mulhern, Maria S.
Moffett, Charlotte R.
Naughton, Patrick J.
author_facet Naughton, Violetta
Grzelak, Teresa
Mulhern, Maria S.
Moffett, Charlotte R.
Naughton, Patrick J.
author_sort Naughton, Violetta
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pet cats need their humans for shelter, food, water, and company while, humans are responsible for providing such standard of care so as to ensure good health and welfare of their animals. This study investigated if owners’ beliefs and perceptions of pet cats’ needs and selected behaviours are associated with socio-demographic factors, in order to assess standards of fundamental care provided to animals. We found that selected socio-demographic factors, e.g., owner’s occupation or gender, are significantly associated with the owner’s beliefs/opinions and practices of care provided to their pet cats, e.g., type and amount of food or exercise provided to pet cats. The results of this study indicate that some owners may not have sufficient knowledge to provide an appropriate level of care to their cats and thus additional training in fundamental care for non-professionals (as opposed to veterinary and animal science professionals) would benefit the animals. ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional survey questionnaire was developed in-house to investigate pet cat owners’ beliefs and attitudes related to the fundamental care of their pet cats. The questionnaire consisted of questions which were grouped into the following sections: (i) owners’ socio-demographics; (ii) cat(s) body weight and body condition monitoring; (iii) owners’ attitudes to cats’ dietary preferences, needs and satisfaction, (iv) owners’ perceptions of their cats’ physical exercise needs and satisfaction. The sample size of 376 was estimated to be required to represent the population of the given geographical location (Belfast, NI, UK). Hard copies of the questionnaires were distributed in January and February 2019 and in total 402 completed questionnaires were collected; questionnaires which included >20% of missing or incomprehensible responses were excluded from the database, resulting in 398 questionnaires being included in the final database. The study identified a number of socio-demographic factors associated with owners’ beliefs and attitudes that directly affect care provided to pet cats, e.g., the owner’s occupation has been identified as a factor associated with owner perception of certain cats’ behaviours, e.g., a cat brushing against the owner as food requests by their animal (Chi-Square 7.711 (df1), exact p = 0.006). Furthermore, most female respondents, aged 26–67 years and in an occupation not related to animals, reported selecting cat food based on their animal preferences (Chi-Square 10.332 (df1), exact p = 0.003). In contrast, female owners in animal and veterinary occupations were significantly more likely as compared to other respondents (Chi-Square 15.228 (df1), exact p < 0.001), to select cat food based on its perceived health benefit to the cat. Analysis of the respondents’ opinions of cats’ abilities to self-regulate physical activity showed that owners age was the main differentiating determinant, i.e., cat owners over 25 years old were significantly more likely than younger adults to believe that pet cats can regulate their own physical activity to keep healthy (Chi-Square 6.313 (df1), exact p = 0.025). Furthermore, respondents’ opinions of their cat’s ability to self-regulate feed intake were mainly associated with owner’s education level (Chi-Square 6.367 (df1), exact p = 0.036). The study results indicated that the attitude and beliefs behind the fundamental care practices provided to pet cats depends on particular demographic factors, especially owners’ education and occupation.
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spelling pubmed-95592922022-10-14 Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast Naughton, Violetta Grzelak, Teresa Mulhern, Maria S. Moffett, Charlotte R. Naughton, Patrick J. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pet cats need their humans for shelter, food, water, and company while, humans are responsible for providing such standard of care so as to ensure good health and welfare of their animals. This study investigated if owners’ beliefs and perceptions of pet cats’ needs and selected behaviours are associated with socio-demographic factors, in order to assess standards of fundamental care provided to animals. We found that selected socio-demographic factors, e.g., owner’s occupation or gender, are significantly associated with the owner’s beliefs/opinions and practices of care provided to their pet cats, e.g., type and amount of food or exercise provided to pet cats. The results of this study indicate that some owners may not have sufficient knowledge to provide an appropriate level of care to their cats and thus additional training in fundamental care for non-professionals (as opposed to veterinary and animal science professionals) would benefit the animals. ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional survey questionnaire was developed in-house to investigate pet cat owners’ beliefs and attitudes related to the fundamental care of their pet cats. The questionnaire consisted of questions which were grouped into the following sections: (i) owners’ socio-demographics; (ii) cat(s) body weight and body condition monitoring; (iii) owners’ attitudes to cats’ dietary preferences, needs and satisfaction, (iv) owners’ perceptions of their cats’ physical exercise needs and satisfaction. The sample size of 376 was estimated to be required to represent the population of the given geographical location (Belfast, NI, UK). Hard copies of the questionnaires were distributed in January and February 2019 and in total 402 completed questionnaires were collected; questionnaires which included >20% of missing or incomprehensible responses were excluded from the database, resulting in 398 questionnaires being included in the final database. The study identified a number of socio-demographic factors associated with owners’ beliefs and attitudes that directly affect care provided to pet cats, e.g., the owner’s occupation has been identified as a factor associated with owner perception of certain cats’ behaviours, e.g., a cat brushing against the owner as food requests by their animal (Chi-Square 7.711 (df1), exact p = 0.006). Furthermore, most female respondents, aged 26–67 years and in an occupation not related to animals, reported selecting cat food based on their animal preferences (Chi-Square 10.332 (df1), exact p = 0.003). In contrast, female owners in animal and veterinary occupations were significantly more likely as compared to other respondents (Chi-Square 15.228 (df1), exact p < 0.001), to select cat food based on its perceived health benefit to the cat. Analysis of the respondents’ opinions of cats’ abilities to self-regulate physical activity showed that owners age was the main differentiating determinant, i.e., cat owners over 25 years old were significantly more likely than younger adults to believe that pet cats can regulate their own physical activity to keep healthy (Chi-Square 6.313 (df1), exact p = 0.025). Furthermore, respondents’ opinions of their cat’s ability to self-regulate feed intake were mainly associated with owner’s education level (Chi-Square 6.367 (df1), exact p = 0.036). The study results indicated that the attitude and beliefs behind the fundamental care practices provided to pet cats depends on particular demographic factors, especially owners’ education and occupation. MDPI 2022-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9559292/ /pubmed/36230386 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12192645 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Naughton, Violetta
Grzelak, Teresa
Mulhern, Maria S.
Moffett, Charlotte R.
Naughton, Patrick J.
Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title_full Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title_fullStr Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title_full_unstemmed Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title_short Association between Socio-Demographic Factors and Owners’ Beliefs and Attitudes to Pet Cats Fundamental Dietary and Physical Exercise Needs, in City of Belfast
title_sort association between socio-demographic factors and owners’ beliefs and attitudes to pet cats fundamental dietary and physical exercise needs, in city of belfast
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9559292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36230386
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12192645
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