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Daily Dog Walks Work Off Weight for
Owners, MU Researchers Find
-Scientists Find that Participants also Engaged
in Healthier Habits Following Study
University
of Missouri-Columbia News Bureau [original
story can be found here]
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Dogs may be a man's best
friend, but they also might be an instrumental tool in weight
loss. A new study at the University of Missouri-Columbia has
found that having a pet can encourage owners to get more exercise
and results in more weight loss than most nationally known
diet plans.
"Our goal was to look for ways to
increase the average exercise regimen, and we found being
responsible for a pet, such as committing to walk a loaner
dog, encouraged people who did not own dogs to walk more often
and for longer periods of time," said Rebecca Johnson,
associate professor of nursing and director of the College
of Veterinary Medicine’s Research Center for Human-Animal
Interaction. "Our first study group averaged a weight
loss of 14 pounds during the one-year program."
The research project encouraged economically
disadvantaged, disabled participants to walk with dogs on
a regular, graduated schedule. Johnson, who collaborated with
Richard Meadows, director of community practice at the Mizzou
Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, said the participants
began the program by walking 10 minutes per day, three times
each week. Eventually, the participants walked up to 20 minutes
per day, five times each week. During rainy days, the participants
walked an inside route.
Prior to the program's initiation, personnel
in the School of Health Professions' Missouri Mobile Health
van gave each participant a full health assessment measuring
such indicators as weight, lean body mass, bone density, blood
pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol, triglycerides, joint movement
functional ability and mood.
Having participants engage in a shorter
and longer program enabled the researchers to identify which
program produced more weight loss. The first group walked
for 50 weeks, while the second group walked for only 26 weeks.
Johnson found that the first group averaged a weight loss
of 14 pounds, a better result than most of the nationally
known weight-loss plans report. Johnson said the weight loss
in the second group was not statistically significant, but
that the participants did engage in other activities that
surprised the researchers.
"The results of the first group were
wonderful," Johnson said. "Even though we didn't
see a significant amount of weight loss in the group that
walked for a shorter period of time, by the end of the study,
all the participants were walking for longer periods of time
and walking for daily errands instead of using some other
type of transportation.
"In addition, two of the participants
made a trip to the humane society to adopt animals, and several
began volunteering to walk the dogs at the shelter. Many of
them told us that they didn't necessarily walk in the study
because they knew it was good for their health; they enjoyed
walking because they knew it was good for the animals."
The dogs in the study were provided by
the Pet Assisted Love and Support program at the MU College
of Veterinary Medicine. The dogs are pets of faculty and staff
at the college and must pass rigorous safety training procedures
and a "good citizenship" test before they are allowed
to be in the program. In addition, all human participants
in the program were fitted with new walking shoes.
The Missouri Foundation for Health
funded the study. Johnson's next research project involves
people taking animals to the gym. While walking only addresses
certain aspects of fitness, Johnson believes that animals
viewed as support companions while at the gym can increase
a participant’s self-esteem and encourage them to exercise
in other ways that will benefit their health.
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