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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Pets are part of many adolescent’s lives. Objectives: To identify in a large
national representative sample of Portuguese adolescents (HSBC study), the
percentage of adolescents that have pets, what kind of feelings pets provide,
differences by gender and age (through school grades) and to verify whether
adolescent health, well-being, life satisfaction and psychological symptoms
are associated with having a pet. Methods: The 2014 study provided national
data of 6026 Portuguese adolescents (52.3% of which were girls), whose
mean age was 13.8 years, randomly selected from those attending 6th, 8th
and 10th grades. Measures included asking the participant if he/she had pets,
which pet was, and the relationship they had with the pet, ISS, perception of
well-being, life satisfaction and psychological symptoms. Results: The large
majority of Portuguese adolescents had a pet. Adolescents who referred having
a pet reported more frequently having dogs and cats. As for positive feelings
related to pets, results showed that pets give them feelings of happiness,
companionship, nurturing, tranquility, security and responsibility always/
almost always, especially in girls and younger boys. The results also showed
that having a dog was associated with a higher socio-economic status,
better perception of well-being, more life satisfaction and less psychological
symptoms. Conclusion: Since research shows that young people who have pets
report higher rates of well-being/health perception, that information should
be used to conduct more studies and change policies in ways that benefit
adults and children.
Description
Keywords
Pets Adolescents Autonomy Nurturing Responsibility Well-being
Citation
European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1-17 Published on-line: 17 Apr 2017. Doi: 10.1080/17405629.2017.1317242
Publisher
Taylor & Francis