Owner Attitudes Toward Feeding and Exercise: Understanding the Human Side of Pet Obesity

Research Study Chiang Mai, Thailand, November 23, 2025The Veterinary Record (2017) summarized focus group findings showing that emotional attachment, feeding behaviour, and exercise patterns in pet owners directly shape the rise of obesity in companion animals.

Published in The Veterinary Record (Volume 181, p. 349), this research note highlighted obesity as the most prevalent nutritional disorder in pet dogs and cats, linked to higher risks of cancer, diabetes, and reduced lifespan. Beyond metabolic and dietary causes, the study emphasized the human behavioural component—how owners’ emotions, beliefs, and daily habits influence pets’ health outcomes.

The study organized seven focus group discussions with 43 dog and cat owners, exploring topics such as feeding practices, perceptions of pet weight, and exercise routines. Participants revealed low perceived control over feeding, with common challenges including household members giving additional food and pets persistently begging. Owners often admitted giving treats not for nutritional value, but to reinforce behaviour or express affection—a pattern of emotional reinforcement that mirrors human comfort-eating dynamics.

When discussing exercise, most participants expressed positive attitudes but also described anxiety and stress during dog walks, particularly concerning encounters with unfamiliar or aggressive dogs. These emotional barriers to consistent exercise reflected the broader psychosocial tension between care, fear, and control—factors rarely addressed in veterinary or training frameworks.

The authors concluded that owner psychology is central to effective obesity prevention. Understanding why humans overfeed or under-exercise their pets—often out of love, guilt, or miscommunication—enables veterinarians and trainers to design more empathetic, sustainable interventions. This perspective integrates seamlessly with the NeuroBond model, which recognises that human emotional states directly influence canine physiology and behaviour. Inconsistent feeding and emotional projection can dysregulate the dog’s nervous system, turning affection-driven habits into chronic stressors that undermine balance and well-being.

Source: Selected highlights from other veterinary journals. (2017). The Veterinary Record, 181, 349–349. Published September 28, 2017.

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📄 Published whitepaper: The Invisible Leash, Aggression in Multiple Dog Households, Instinct Interrupted & Boredom–Frustration–Aggression Pipeline, NeuroBond Method

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