Say you know someone who really needs to get more
exercise (and don’t we all know someone like that?). Now, if that
someone had an enthusiastic exercise companion who needed physical
activity as much they did, one who was always willing and ready
to go, you’d think they’d be more likely to get out more often,
right?
Wrong. Tragically wrong!
At least, that was the finding of researchers in
Australia, where 40 percent of households have just such a companion
—the family dog! But those Australian dogs seldom get the opportunity
to encourage or accompany their owners on any kind of activity.
In fact, the majority of those pooches are prisoners
of their owners’ sedentary lifestyles. No amount of furry fervor
seems very effective at getting the owners to walk those dogs, even
though it would be good for everyone involved.
With humor seldom found in medical research, the
investigators from the University of New South Wales wrote in the
Medical Journal of Australia that the fitness impact of dog walking,
“has been ignawed by researchers… Hence, this report cuts to the
bone and unleashes an incisive public health argument for increasing
dog walking.”
They think their argument would apply to Americans,
too. They don’t offer any data indicating similar dog-walking habits
among Yanks and Aussies, but they are similarly westernized societies,
and the same percentage of both U.S. and Australian homes do have
at least one dog. Though with more than 65 million poochie companions
overall, Americans easily lead the world in dog ownership.
However, Americans also lead the world in obesity,
and public health advocates have wrangled with various ideas to
get Americans to eat less and move more. Could the Aussies be on
to something?
Here’s what they found: Of almost 1,000 randomly
sampled adults in New South Wales, the researchers reported that
less than half achieved the U.S. Surgeon General’s recommended 150
minutes of exercise weekly to achieve some “health enhancements.”
Most dog owners in the sample (about half had dogs)
were actually less likely than the non-owners to get their 150 minutes
of exercise, either with or without Fido at their side. Most spent
less than an hour a week actually walking with their dog. Fully
59 percent said they never walked their dog at all! Some 26 percent
said they walked the dog up to 2.5 hours over a week, and only 15
percent said they spent at least 2.5 hours weekly on “walkies,”
as the Aussies call that doggie duty.
There is abundant data that show much diabetes, cardiovascular
disease and even some cancers could be avoided altogether if only
people were more physically active. With that in mind, the dog-walking
researchers went on to establish some comically weighty —though
scientifically legitimate— concepts about the “dog attributable
fraction” of disease that might be prevented if all dog owners were
to get their pups out for that 2.5 hour standard.
The Australian researchers figured that if all down-under
dog owners paraded their pooches 150 minutes a week, then 71 percent
of the total Aussie population would be getting enough exercise!
(Remember, a dog might have more than one owner.) And they estimated
savings of about $175 million a year (Australian) in reduced costs
for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and colon cancer.
And that’s to say nothing of the costs of caring
for those poor, corpulent canines. Typically, we stick to issues
of human health, but given Americans’ famous devotion to their pets,
perhaps the whole idea of Fitness with Fido would be more likely
to take off if Americans understood how much their dogs need their
“walkies,” too.
Statistics vary, but some experts say that up to
60 percent of our pooches are presently portly, almost mirroring
the proportion of the people population. These dogs have many of
the same health risks as overweight humans. Canine obesity is associated
with heart and respiratory problems, diabetes, skeletal stress,
and gastrointestinal disorders.
The U.S.’s biggest pet health insurance carrier,
Veterinary Pet Insurance, says cardiac arrest claims for pets are
up 47 percent, diabetes by 16 percent and hypertension by 27 percent.
The Journal of Nutrition published a study showing that the pets
of overweight owners were three times more likely to be obese than
those of normal weight owners.
And while a person who has to struggle with their
buttons may notice their own weight getting out of bounds, most
people simply don’t have the knowledge to recognize a weight problem
developing in a cherished pet, so the animal gets heavier and less
active, and closer to a premature death.
One long-term study by Purina showed that dogs kept
to a healthy weight lived 15 percent longer than overweight dogs.
That’s about the same differential we see in humans.
We know that a nutrition and fitness program can
turn that trend around for pets and their people, but all the tail-wagging
and enthusiasm in the world won’t do any good unless the people
in charge —and that’s the people— turn the knob and step on out.
THROUGH THICK & THIN
If you’re the indulgent dog owner, consider that really pampering
your pet means getting him healthy, right along with you! To reach
the U.S. Surgeon General’s recommendation of 150 minutes a week
of exercise, your Fitness with Fido program could start with just
a 20-minute walk each day — of couse, that’s without stopping every
ten feet to sniff a bush.
Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D. is a board certified Bariatric Physicians,
the medical specialty of weight management, and a board certified
Family Physician. She specializes in lifetime weight management
at the Cederquist Medical Wellness Center, her Naples, FL private
practice.
Dr. Cederquist is a contributing
medical editor for NBC-2 News, a trustee of the American Society
Of Bariatric Physicians and the author of " Helping Your Overweight
Child - A Family Guide", www.Amazon.Com or by
Calling Toll-Free 1-800-431-1579.
If you are interested in a delicious,
doctor-designed, foolproof plan for fast and healthy weight loss
please visit Dr. Cederquist's Diet-To-Your-Door program by clicking here.