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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog pulling on leash: collar versus chest harness effects

By Shih, Hao-Yu et al.Ā·Published in Frontiers in veterinary scienceĀ·2021Ā·School of Veterinary Science, AustraliaĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Dog Pulling on the Leash: Effects of Restraint by a Neck Collar vs. a Chest Harness.

Species:
dog
Behaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 52 shelter dogs was tested to see how much they pulled on a leash while wearing either a neck collar or a back-connection harness. The dogs pulled harder and more consistently when wearing the harness while trying to reach a food treat, but there was no difference in pulling when they were after a toy. Interestingly, the dogs seemed to pay more attention to the person conducting the test when they were in the harness. Overall, while the harness may encourage more pulling for food, it didn't show any signs of causing stress in the dogs.

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Abstract

Leash pulling is a concern for dog owners and can be detrimental to the health and welfare of dogs. Neck-collars and back-connection harnesses are popular restraint types. Harnesses have been proposed as a better and more considerate option for canine health and welfare. Anecdotally, dogs pull more when wearing a back-connection harness; however, there is no scientific evidence for this perception. This study aimed to investigate how strongly dogs pull on the lead to achieve a food treat or toy under restraint by a neck-collar versus a back-connection harness. A within-subject counterbalanced design was used for the study, involving 52 shelter dogs. A customised canine leash tension metre was connected to the collar or harness to record the pulling of the dogs, including measuring the maximal and mean leash tension, and the time spent pulling. In addition, dog behaviours were recorded using two cameras from two separate directions. The maximal and mean leash tension and the pulling time were greater under restraint by harness when attracting dogs with food treats. No significant difference between harness and collar was found in potential stress-related behaviours (e.g. tail and ear positions, lip-licking, and panting). However, dogs looked at the experimenter more often when restrained by harness than collar in the food treat attraction test. No significant difference was detected between harness and collar with respect to leash tension and stress-related behaviours in the toy attraction test. These findings suggest that dogs tend to pull stronger and more steadily when wearing a back-connection harness compared to a neck collar to reach the food treat but not the toy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34552977/