Pets are a big deal in our culture, and that's a beneficial thing considering there are plenty of health benefits to owning one.
How do pets help humans? For starters, there’s nothing quite like returning home after a long trip or day at the office and being greeted at the door by your pet. That’s not all.
Science suggests that the benefits of owning a pet go far beyond that. For example, who knew cat purr frequencies could heal? More on that later...
Health Benefits of Owning a Pet
Is having a pet good for your health? Yes! You don't even have to own a pet to reap the benefits.
For instance, the Brooklyn Cat Cafe in New York welcomes people to come and enjoy some delicious treats while hanging out with adoptable cats.
Similarly, for dogs, the Dog Cafe was a Los Angeles-based cafe where people can hang with adoptable pups while grabbing a snack, and now there are plenty of dog-friendly places to go. At a cat sanctuary on Lanai, Hawaii, people from around the world come to cuddle with cats. Costa Rica is also home to a similar dog sanctuary, with more than 1,000 adoptable dogs in every stage of life.
The time, effort, and love put into both the cafes and sanctuaries demonstrate the value people place on animals. Priceless.
Why is it beneficial to have pets? For pet owners and lovers, it comes as no surprise that having a pet is beneficial for health and well-being, including:
1. Social interaction
Social interaction is one of the more obvious health benefits of owning a pet. One underlying mechanism for the positive impact of social and physical contact lies within the dopaminergic pathway in the brain. Following interactions with an animal, such as petting or snuggling, there is an increase in neurotransmitters, specifically dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin, that create a euphoric feeling.
A study done at the Veterans Administration Medical Center illustrates another way that animals impact social interaction. In the study, patients sat in either the presence or absence of a dog. Results indicated that social interaction among patients increased following the presence of the dogs.
The interaction triggered a cascade of "feel good" neurotransmitters, increasing individuals' mood, pleasant emotions, and overall mental health.
2. Mood improvement
Human and pet interactions, whether through physical contact or through visual stimulation, can create a positive, calming, and soothing atmosphere. Physical contact with an animal, such as petting or cuddling, activates touch receptors in the skin. These touch receptors then stimulate areas of the brain that are associated with reward centers, causing a cascade of activity that results in the release of a variety of neurotransmitters.
Stimulation of the touch receptors also results in an increase in oxytocin, the love hormone, and a decrease in cortisol levels, the stress hormone.
3. May Boost Heart Health
An increase in oxytocin is associated with stress relief because it reduces anxiety and blood pressure. A study conducted at the University of Minnesota Stroke Institute in Minneapolis illustrated that pet owners, particularly cat owners, experienced a 30 percent decrease in heart attack or stroke.
The human-animal relationship has also been shown to decrease cholesterol and triglyceride levels. The decrease in cortisol, cholesterol, and triglyceride levels in conjunction with the increase in oxytocin all contribute to aiding in the health of an individual’s cardiovascular system, therefore decreasing the risk of a heart attack or stroke.
4. Boost mental health
Just seeing a pet also has profound positive effects. A study at Caltech showed that individual brain cells responded when a person saw an animal but not when they saw another person, place, or object.
The cells activated upon visual stimulation are found in the amygdala, the region in the brain associated with emotion and fear. Since the cells respond to any type of animal, it’s believed that it may be a leftover ancestral relic involving specialized cells that help the brain respond to danger quickly.
In those times, the danger was often animals. Now, these cells are responding to an emotional response evoked by the animal that is often less out of fear and more often due to adoration, once again activating the dopaminergic pathway. It’s due to the activation of this pathway from varying interactions with animals that results in an increase in mood, a decrease in anxiety, improved sleep, and an overall improvement of mental health.
5. Anxiety Reducer
Several studies have shown that interactions with animals reduce anxiety and increase sleep. In one such study, 230 patients were referred to animal therapeutic sessions. Data was collected prior to and following the animal therapy session, with results showing a significant reduction in anxiety following the session.
This study illustrates the significant impact animals have in helping reduce anxiety during times of duress, though more research is needed to understand the underlying mechanism.
6. Sleep better
Another study conducted by the Mayo Clinic illustrated that 41 percent sleep better due to the presence of the pet in bed, while only 20 percent describe a sleep disturbance due to it.
Animal presence may create feelings of safety, comfort, and coziness. Improvements in sleep lead to a slew of other health benefits, including warding off illness, increased memory, succinct mental processes, a decrease in stress, and an improvement in mood.
7. Greater Relaxation
While the effects that cats and dogs have on humans are similar in many ways, felines have one crucial difference that puts them at an advantage to be more beneficial to humans than dogs. Cats purr.
Cat purring occurs during both inhalation and exhalation, with a consistent pattern and frequency between 25 and 150 Hz.
While purring helps soothe, calm, and lull people to sleep with its rhythmic pattern and vibrations, purring has also been shown to occur at frequencies often used in therapies to heal the human body. Studies have shown therapeutic vibrations can aid in bone growth, fracture healing, pain relief, swelling reduction, wound healing, muscle growth and repair, and increased mobility of joints at frequencies between 25 and 150 Hz.
Beyond healing an injury, the vibrations caused by a cat purr can lead to changes in brain activity.
A noninvasive study was done to measure the neurological response of the high-frequency sound and vibration (16). An electroencephalography test revealed increased neuronal activity in the occipital region (visual perception) during high-frequency stimulation, as well as increased cerebral flow within the brain stem (a region of the brain critical for regulation of the central nervous system, cardiac function, breathing, heart, and the left thalamus that regulates consciousness).
Purring is often compared to rhythmic chanting, which is used in different cultures to aid in a healing process or to create a meditative or calm state. Rhythmic sounds, such as chanting or purring, cause a phenomenon known as brainwave entrainment.
Brainwave entrainment is a process in which an individual’s brainwave frequency becomes synchronized with a periodic stimulus (vibration, sound, light). The cat purr's vibration, combined with the purr's sound, can lull a person into relaxation.
One study showed the effects of natural sounds on individuals. Individuals were exposed to sounds found within nature, and cardiac monitoring along with imaging techniques was used to determine brain activity during tasks following noise exposure.
The results showed that natural sounds, such as those made from a cat, were associated with a decrease in the sympathetic response (the fight or flight response to a situation) and an increase in the parasympathetic response. The parasympathetic response is responsible for the body’s ability to relax. Therefore, one is able to deduce that the vibration and sound of a purr from the cat has the ability to aid in healing as well as cause relaxation in humans.
Despite the differences, pet owners benefit from the interactions they have with their pets and with other individuals due to their pets. Interactions with both animals and humans result in a release of the neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin in the brain. The release of these neurotransmitters activates the dopaminergic “reward” pathway in the brain, causing a feeling of happiness.
The increase in oxytocin, the love hormone, causes a decrease in the stress hormone cortisol. All of this together results in an increase in mood, better sleep, a decrease in blood pressure, and a more relaxed feeling.
All pets are created equal and are very similar in the beneficial, symbiotic relationship they have with humans, except for cats, whose purr sets them apart from the rest of the animal pack. The purr of a cat has also been compared to rhythmic chanting and has the ability to relax someone to a state comparable to post-meditation. The purr's rhythm and vibration, much like chanting and even music, can have a brainwave entrainment effect.
There is the added benefit of potentially moving the body more when you have a pet, such as walking a dog or playing with a cat. This can encourage people to get up and move around instead of remaining sedentary all day.
Even with all this knowledge, more research is needed to fully understand how animals, and especially the purr of cats, affect the central nervous system. With this knowledge, therapies could evolve in conjunction with conventional medicine to help individuals with certain mental health issues and the elderly.
Final Thoughts
- The health benefits of owning a pet range from improving social interaction and mental health to reducing the risk of heart attack or stroke.
- Health benefits of both dogs and cats are noted in the literature, but cats seem to have an edge due to the healing frequency of purrs.
- Other health benefits of owning a pet include reducing cortisol levels and the fight or flight response, decreasing anxiety and depression, and more.