McDowall Sonya, Hazel Susan J, Hamilton-Bruce M Anne, Stuckey Rwth, Howell Tiffani J
School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3082, Australia.
School of Animal and Veterinary Science, Roseworthy Campus, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
Animals (Basel). 2024 Sep 2;14(17):2549. doi: 10.3390/ani14172549.
It is important to understand the reasons for companion animal relinquishment to help reduce the financial and ethical problems arising from too many dogs and cats in shelters. This study investigates the socioeconomic factors and reasons behind companion animal relinquishment in Australia, utilizing data from five animal shelters, over a five-year period (Financial Year 2018/19 to 2022/23). Descriptive statistics reveal that the median Index of Relative Socio-Economic Advantage and Disadvantage (IRSAD) decile of companion animal guardians who relinquished their companion animal was decile 4 out of 10, indicating that they live in areas of lower-than-average socioeconomic status. Cats accounted for 59.4% and dogs for 40.6% of all relinquishments, with more relinquishments from lower socioeconomic deciles (1-5) (cats: 62.6%, dogs: 65.8%). The median age of relinquished cats was 5 months and dogs 16 months, with human factor-related issues (e.g., Housing, Financial Constraints, Human Healthcare) cited in 86% of cases. Descriptive analysis for the five financial years shows a declining trend in numbers of relinquishments, with housing issues (31.2%) identified as the primary reason, followed by ownership decisions (16.2%), financial constraints (11.2%), and human health issues (10.4%). Comparing the reasons for relinquishment between lower (decile 1-5) and higher (decile 6-10) socioeconomic status demonstrated that financial difficulties were a more common reason in lower vs. higher socioeconomic groups, while human health and family-related issues are more common in higher vs. lower socioeconomic groups. These findings highlight the critical role of socioeconomic factors in understanding why people relinquish their companion animals, which can inform targeted interventions to support companion animal welfare across different socioeconomic backgrounds.
了解伴侣动物被遗弃的原因对于帮助减少因收容所中猫狗数量过多而产生的经济和伦理问题至关重要。本研究利用来自五个动物收容所、为期五年(2018/19财年至2022/23财年)的数据,调查了澳大利亚伴侣动物被遗弃背后的社会经济因素和原因。描述性统计显示,放弃其伴侣动物的伴侣动物监护人的相对社会经济优势和劣势指数(IRSAD)中位数十分位数为十分之四,这表明他们生活在社会经济地位低于平均水平的地区。在所有被遗弃的动物中,猫占59.4%,狗占40.6%,社会经济较低十分位数(1-5)的被遗弃动物更多(猫:62.6%,狗:65.8%)。被遗弃猫的中位数年龄为5个月,狗为16个月,86%的案例中提到了与人为因素相关的问题(如住房、经济限制、人类医疗保健)。对这五个财政年度的描述性分析显示,被遗弃动物数量呈下降趋势,住房问题(31.2%)被确定为主要原因,其次是所有权决定(16.2%)、经济限制(11.2%)和人类健康问题(10.4%)。比较社会经济地位较低(十分位数1-5)和较高(十分位数6-10)群体之间的遗弃原因表明,经济困难在社会经济地位较低的群体中比在较高群体中更常见,而人类健康和家庭相关问题在社会经济地位较高的群体中比在较低群体中更常见。这些发现凸显了社会经济因素在理解人们为何遗弃其伴侣动物方面的关键作用,这可为支持不同社会经济背景下伴侣动物福利的针对性干预措施提供参考。