Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Indoor cats and owner attachment linked to obesity risk in domestic
By Bjørnvad, Charlotte Reinhard et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2026·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Feline obesity is associated with stronger owner attachment, while indoor confinement increases risk of obesity at an early age in domestic shorthaired cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A study found that indoor domestic shorthaired cats are at a higher risk of becoming overweight or obese, especially if they are confined indoors from a young age. The research showed that owners of heavier cats often felt a stronger attachment to their pets and perceived them as less active compared to owners of cats at a normal weight. Interestingly, cats that have access to the outdoors tend to maintain a healthier weight until they are around 7 years old. This suggests that providing outdoor access may help prevent obesity in cats.
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Abstract
Knowledge of risk factors for overweight and obesity is important for making preventative strategies for feline obesity. The present study investigated risk factors for feline obesity in privately owned adult cats on Zealand, Denmark. Privately owned cats (>1 year old and reportedly healthy) were recruited through social media. During home visits, the cats underwent a full physical examination and body condition was scored by trained investigators. Owners answered a questionnaire relating to cat characteristics, owner characteristics and attachment to their cat, feeding practices and living environment. For statistical analyses cats were divided into moderately lean to moderately overweight (BCS 4-6/9) and heavy/obese (BCS 7-9/9) groups. Multivariable logistic analysis was performed to predict risk of a cat being heavy/obese. 192 cats were included in the final analysis. 65% were BCS 4-6/9, and 35% were BCS 7-9/9. In the multivariate analysis, owners of heavy/obese cats were significantly more attached to their cat and owners of these cats perceived their cat as less active than owners of normal weight cats. Indoor confined domestic shorthaired cats had a high risk of being heavy/obese from a young age (1 year old), while the risk for domestic shorthaired cats with outdoor access was low at a young age and only slowly increased - culminating around 7 years of age. In contrast, in purebred cats, age only modestly affected the risk of being heavy/obese. In conclusion, indoor confinement was identified to significantly increase the predicted risk of domestic shorthaired cats being heavy/obese from a young age, while the risk for cats having outdoor access was highest at an age around 7 years. Whether a closer owner attachment is a contributing factor in feline obesity development should be investigated further.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41929271/