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Understanding obesity among companion dogs: new measures of owner's beliefs and behaviour and associations with body condition scores

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-26, 02:46 authored by Thomas L Webb, Hugues du Plessis, Hayley Christian, Eleanor Raffan, Vanessa RohlfVanessa Rohlf, Gavin A White
This research aimed to improve our understanding of how owners’ beliefs and behaviour are associated with obesity in companion dogs. To do this, we employed new theoretical frameworks and integrated previously reported measures to curate a collection of brief, user-friendly self-report measures to assess owner factors. The reliability and validity of these was examined in two phases of empirical research, each with a cross-sectional questionnaire design that also examined the validity of assessing body condition score (BCS) from photographs submitted by owners. Phase 1 (n = 47 dog owners from France) found that the brief owner-report measures correlated with the long-form measures (all correlations except one exceeded r = 0.70). BCS as coded from photographs were highly correlated with a vet's assessment of the same dogs (r = 0.67). Phase 2 (n = 3339 dog owners from France, Germany, the UK, Italy, and Russia) investigated which measures are associated with obesity among companion dogs. Perceptions of the dog's vulnerability to the threat of obesity, perceived weight status, perceived costs associated with ownership, normative beliefs about feeding, social support from friends, and being in the precontemplation stage of change predicted BCS alongside demographic factors (e.g., dog's age, neutered status). Taken together, the findings provide a method for assessing a wide range of factors that may be associated with obesity among companion dogs and point to potential targets for interventions designed to reduce obesity.

Funding

Hayley Christian's contribution was supported by a Future Leader Fellowship from the Australian National Heart Foundation (#100794).

History

Publication Date

2020-07-01

Journal

Preventive Veterinary Medicine

Volume

180

Article Number

105029

Pagination

9p.

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0167-5877

Rights Statement

© 2020 Published by Elsevier. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license, whereby credit must be given to the creator, only noncommercial uses of the work are permitted and no derivatives or adaptations of the work are permitted: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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