
Do Cats Help With Stress? Study Finds Cat Interaction May Not Always Soothe Owners
For decades, pet owners have sworn by the calming power of their animals. Rough day at work? Curl up with the cat. Feeling anxious? Let the dog climb into your lap. The idea that pets soothe stress has become something close to common wisdom, the kind of thing nobody really questions. But a new study is pushing back on at least part of that picture, and the findings about cats might surprise anyone who has ever sought comfort from their feline companion.
Researchers studying the emotional lives of pet owners in real time found that while interacting with any companion animal was tied to better moods from moment to moment, pets did not buffer people from the negative emotions tied to stressful situations. For cat owners in this sample, the data pointed in an unexpected direction: more engagement with a cat during a stressful moment was associated with stronger negative feelings, not weaker ones.
Researchers caution that this effect was relatively small and should be interpreted carefully. The study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, is one of the more careful looks at what scientists call the “pet effect,” the popular belief that owning or interacting with a pet improves mental health, and one of the few to directly compare how dogs and cats differ in that picture.
What sets this study apart is how it gathered data. Rather than asking people to look back on how their pet made them feel, researchers tracked participants’ emotions as they were happening, multiple times per day, over five consecutive days.
Dogs and Cats Lifted Mood Equally, but Neither Blocked Stress
A team of researchers recruited 188 dog and cat owners living in the Netherlands or Belgium. Participants had to be at least 18 years old and own a functioning smartphone. Once enrolled, they downloaded an app that sent up to ten notifications a day at random intervals between 7:30 in the morning and 10:30 at night. Each notification prompted a short questionnaire about current mood, stress level, ongoing activity, whether they were alone, and whether their pet was present and being interacted with.
The five-day window was designed to include at least one non-workday and to avoid holidays, so that pet interactions would reflect typical daily life rather than exceptional circumstances. Over the course of the study, participants generated nearly 8,000 individual reports. Researchers controlled for factors like age, gender, and social context, and excluded moments when both a dog and a cat were present, since those made it impossible to isolate the effect of either species.
Spending time with a companion animal was genuinely associated with feeling better in the moment. When people reported higher levels of interaction with their pet, whether a dog or a cat, they also reported more positive emotions and fewer negative ones. This held up even after accounting for whether they were alone or around other people, suggesting the emotional lift from pets was not simply a stand-in for human company.
Despite popular assumptions that dogs, with their outgoing and socially responsive nature, might have an edge, the data showed no meaningful difference between species when it came to everyday emotional benefits. Where things got more complicated was in stressful situations. Neither dogs nor cats appeared to soften the emotional blow of a difficult or upsetting event during the moments when owners were actively engaging with them.
The Surprising Cat Finding
When researchers looked specifically at how people responded emotionally to upsetting events, they found that more engagement with a cat during those moments was associated with stronger negative emotions, not weaker ones. No such pattern appeared for dog owners. The cat-specific effect was relatively small, and the researchers urge caution before drawing broad conclusions, noting it will need replication in larger studies before anything definitive can be said.
Source : https://studyfinds.com/pets-cats-may-not-reduce-stress/