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5
Ways Pets Can Improve Your Health
Owning a pert can ward off depression, lower
blood pressure and boost immunity. It may even
improve your social life.
By Jeanie Lerche Davis WebMD Feature
A pet is certainly a great friend. After a
difficult day, pet owners quite literally feel
the love.
In fact, for nearly 25 years, research has shown
that living with pets provides certain health
benefits. Pets help lower blood pressure and
lessen anxiety. They boost our immunity. They
can even help you get dates.
Allergy Fighters
"The old thinking was that if your family had a
pet, the children were more likely to become
allergic to the pet. And if you came from an
allergy-prone family, pets should be avoided,"
says researcher James E. Gern, MD, a
pediatrician at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, in the Journal of Allergy and
Clinical Immunology.
However, a growing number of studies have
suggested that kids growing up in a home with
"furred animals" -- whether it's a pet cat or
dog, or on a farm and exposed to large animals
-- will have less risk of allergies and asthma,
he tells WebMD.
In one study, Gern analyzed the blood of babies
immediately after birth and one year later. He
was looking for evidence of an allergic
reaction, immunity changes, and for reactions to
bacteria in the environment.
If a dog lived in the home, infants were less
likely to show evidence of pet allergies -- 19%
vs. 33%. They also were less likely to have
eczema, a common allergy skin condition that
causes red patches and itching. In addition,
they had higher levels of some immune system
chemicals -- a sign of stronger immune system
activation.
"Dogs are dirty animals, and this suggests that
babies who have greater exposure to dirt and
allergens have a stronger immune system," Gern
says.
Date Magnets
Dogs are great for making love connections.
Forget Internet matchmaking -- a dog is a
natural conversation starter.
This especially helps ease people out of social
isolation or shyness, Nadine Kaslow, PhD,
professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
at Emory University in Atlanta, tells WebMD.
"People ask about breed, they watch the dog's
tricks," Kaslow says. "Sometimes the
conversation stays at the 'dog level,' sometimes
it becomes a real social interchange."
Dogs for the Aged
"Studies have shown that Alzheimer's patients
have fewer anxious outbursts if there is an
animal in the home," says Lynette Hart, PhD,
associate professor at the University of
California at Davis School of Veterinary
Medicine.
"Their caregivers also feel less burdened when
there is a pet, particularly if it is a cat,
which generally requires less care than a dog,"
says Hart.
Walking a dog or just caring for a pet -- for
elderly people who are able -- can provide
exercise and companionship. One insurance
company, Midland Life Insurance Company of
Columbus, Ohio, asks clients over age 75 if they
have a pet as part of their medical screening --
which often helps tip the scales in their favor.
Good for Mind and Soul
Pet owners with AIDS are far less likely to
suffer from depression than those without pets.
"The benefit is especially pronounced when
people are strongly attached to their pets,"
says researcher Judith Siegel, PhD.
In one study, stockbrokers with high blood
pressure who adopted a cat or dog had lower
blood pressure readings in stressful situations
than did people without pets.
People in stress mode get into a "state of dis-ease,"
in which harmful chemicals like cortisol and
norepinephrine can negatively affect the immune
system, says Blair Justice, PhD, a psychology
professor at the University of Texas School of
Public Health and author of Who Gets Sick: How
Beliefs, Moods, and Thoughts Affect Your Health.
Studies show a link between these chemicals and
plaque buildup in arteries, the red flag for
heart disease, says Justice.
Like any enjoyable activity, playing with a dog
can elevate levels of serotonin and dopamine --
nerve transmitters that are known to have
pleasurable and calming properties, he tells
WebMD.
"People take drugs like heroin and cocaine to
raise serotonin and dopamine, but the healthy
way to do it is to pet your dog, or hug your
spouse, watch sunsets, or get around something
beautiful in nature," says Justice, who recently
hiked the Colorado Rockies with his wife and two
dogs.
Good for the Heart
Heart attack patients who have pets survive
longer than those without, according to several
studies. Male pet owners have less sign of heart
disease -- lower triglyceride and cholesterol
levels -- than non-owners, researchers say.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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In one study, stockbrokers with high
blood pressure who adopted a cat or dog had lower
blood pressure readings in stressful situations than
did people without pets. |
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