Our Love Affair with Pets
- Georgianna Donadio MSc,DC, Phd
- Mar 28
- 4 min read

While it may be difficult to get large numbers of American to collectively agree on the same issue, it seems that when it comes to pets and the value we place on them, there is little disagreement. The 2025 American Pet Products Association survey and Forbes reported that an astounding 66% of all American household have a pet living with them. An identified 42.9 million have cats, while dogs make up 54.4. Fresh water fish, birds, reptiles and horses, along with small animals such as rabbit, hamsters, and others make up another 25 - 27 million pets.
Americans it seems have also come to view and treat their pets in human terms. No longer satisfied with relegating the family pet to its own domain, today’s pet lovers are demanding the highest quality products and services for those they love.
The idea of buying a simple dog chew or catnip toy now takes a back seat to designer sweaters and jewelry for our beloved companions. The current trend of dog hotels instead of kennels, indoor animal toilets, perfume and even pet trench coats and a hugely popular service “doggie dates” and exotic animal sitting services have found their way into today’s pet economy.
For the most passionate pet lover faux mink coats, lumberjack vests, designer jackets, matching jeweled leather collar and leash sets, Halloween costumes, and holiday outfits are becoming part of the new “pet fashion”. Safety seats for transporting pets in vehicles are also becoming popular. One of the larger pet expenditure is for pet food. These days the pet food isle looks sticking similar to the rest of the “human food” isles in chin grocery stores. Specialized,balanced gourmet meals are readily available in the refrigerator section as well as all variations
of animal treats, vitamins and supplements. Special diet foods for the senior pet population offer life extension and prolonged health.
Pet dental care, tooth brushes, mouth wash, braces to correct crooked bites, even cosmetic dental surgery is available to the concerned pet lover. There are also pet lovers who are having their animals vasectomies reversed and paying for cosmetic surgery to enhance their pet’s beauty.
Expenditure on pets by their household for 2023-24 is in excess of 136 billion dollars. It is easy to imagine that this number must be a mistake athis is more money being spent on pets in the United State than the gross national product numbers for all but 64 countries around the world.
This 136 billion dollar figure also represents more than double the approximately $42 billion dollars Americans spend on going to movies, video games, or for listening to recorded music.
What fuels our passion for pets? It is really quite simple. Our pets love us unconditionally. They listen to us when we speak, provide companionship without politics or the agenda of most relationships. They accept our love and affection the way we chose to give it without complaint and they provide us in return with affection and loyalty. They are the ultimate loving family member and we are now treating them as such can anyone blame us? Social networking has become the way we communicate and “do” relationships. These days it is often over e-mail and texting messages that we are starting relationships or ending them, sharing major life events -
even proposing marriage. The intimate contact of human connections we had even 15 yearsago before the dominance of the internet and cell phones is being replaced by our pets.
Pets are not only beloved companions, but are also taking on the role of healers. Dogs have been long known for their service as seeing eye dogs, but the use of dogs and other pets in many areas of healing and health monitoring are becoming more widely spread. Dogs who alert their companions for seizures or “sniff out” cancer or horses that assist with helping autistic children to interact with others are easily found on the news or the internet.
A recent study by researcher Dr. Karen Allen, at the State University of New York at Buffalo identified that individuals suffering from hypertension after adopting a dog or cat had lower blood pressure reading in stressful situations than their counter parts who did not have a pet companion. The National Institute of Technology Assessment Workshop: Health Benefits of
Pets identified that pets provide greater psychological stability which protects not only from heart disease and other stress related conditions but also reduces depression. In the same study pets have been shown to lower the cost of health care as individuals with pets make fewer doctor visits, especially “for non-serious medical conditions”.
A Perdue University study demonstrated when seniors face traumas of other adversity the affection received by their pets and the bond between them helps prevent depress and loneliness. As a means of enhancing our psychological and physical well-being, pets have the power to love us, heal us and help us to live longer. If only we could get other humans to do so
with the same honesty and loyalty that our pet companions provide us.
Pets are good for our whole health and having a pet is an act of self-advocacy to insure that you have companionship and do not experience loneliness as those without pets do. Nursing homes
today have companion and affection pets visit their facility on an ongoing basis and this has
been found to be a major positive addition to the residence physical and mental health.
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