Nearly half of dog owners are hesitant to vaccinate their pets
Boston University School of Public Health
A new study has found that US dog owners who harbor mistrust in the safety and efficacy of childhood and adult vaccines are also more likely to hold negative views about vaccinating their four-legged friends.
Public
confidence in adult and child vaccines has declined during the pandemic,
largely spurred by misperceptions and mistrust in the safety and efficacy of
the COVID-19 vaccine. Now a new study led by a Boston University School of
Public Health (BUSPH) researcher suggests that this hesitancy towards COVID
vaccines extends to pet vaccinations, as well -- and at worrying levels.
Published in the journal Vaccine,
the study analyzed a nationally representative sample of adults in the United
States and found that more than half of people who own dogs expressed some
level of canine vaccine hesitancy -- i.e. skepticism about vaccinating their
pets against rabies and other diseases.
An
estimated 45 percent of US households own a dog; according to the survey
results, nearly 40 percent of dog owners believe that canine vaccines are
unsafe, more than 20 percent believe these vaccines are ineffective, and 30
percent consider them to be medically unnecessary.
About
37 percent of dog owners also believe that canine vaccination could cause their
dogs to develop autism, even though there is no scientific data that validates
this risk for animals or humans.
The study is the first to formally quantify the prevalence, origins, and health policy consequences of concerns about canine vaccination. The survey was conducted between March 30 and April 10, 2023 among 2,200 dog owners who answered questions through the research sampling firm YouGov.
Notably,
the findings show indication of a COVID vaccine "spillover" effect in
the US -- that people who hold negative attitudes toward human vaccines are
more likely to hold negative views toward vaccinating their pets. These dog
owners are also more likely to oppose policies that encourage widespread rabies
vaccination, and less likely to make the effort to vaccinate their pets.
These attitudes are in contrast to most state-level
polices in the US, where almost all states require domestic dogs to be
vaccinated against rabies. The disease still poses a potential health threat,
as it carries a near 100-percent fatality rate, and the canine rabies vaccine
is much less accessible in developing countries than in the US and other
high-income countries. More than 59,000 people die from canine-mediated rabies
across the globe each year.
Thus,
if fears towards pet vaccinations persist or increase, this skepticism could
pose serious public health implications for both animals and humans, the
researchers say.
"The
vaccine spillover effects that we document in our research underscore the
importance of restoring trust in human vaccine safety and efficacy," says
study lead and corresponding author Dr. Matt Motta, assistant professor of
health law, policy & management at BUSPH, who studies how anti-science
beliefs and attitudes affect health and health policies. "If
non-vaccination were to become more common, our pets, vets, and even our
friends and family risk coming into contact with vaccine-preventable
diseases."
The
American Animal Hospital Association calls vaccinations "a cornerstone of
canine preventive healthcare" and recommends that all dogs (barring
specific medical reasons), receive a core set of vaccines for rabies,
distemper, adenovirus, parvovirus, and parainfluenza, and advises that many
dogs receive additional "non-core" inoculations for Lyme disease,
Bordetella, and other diseases.
Working
with animals that are not current on their rabies vaccine poses increased risks
for veterinarians and all animal care attendants at a hospital, says study
coauthor Dr. Gabriella Motta, a veterinarian at Glenolden Veterinary Hospital
in Glenolden, Pa. (and sister of Dr. Matt Motta). She says she encounters an
unvaccinated animal or a vaccine-hesitant pet owner every day in her job.
"When a staff member is bitten by an animal, there is always concern for infection or trauma, but the seriousness of the situation escalates if the animal is unvaccinated or overdue for its rabies vaccine," Dr. Gabriella Motta says.
Per Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture guidelines, once a veterinary staff member is bitten by an undervaccinated or unvaccinated animal, the animal must undergo a period of observation and the staff member is encouraged to receive immediate medical attention.
These situations place a mental health burden on
the person bitten, as well as the rest of the veterinary staff, in an industry
that already struggles with widespread burnout, understaffing, and job
turnover, she says.
But she reiterates that the rabies vaccine is
overwhelmingly safe and effective.
"With
any drug, treatment, or vaccine, there is always a risk of adverse effects, but
the risk with the rabies vaccine is quite low -- especially when compared to
the risk of rabies infection, which is almost 100-percent lethal," Dr.
Gabriella Motta says. Pet owners who are concerned about the cost of pet
vaccines may be able to seek low-cost options at local veterinary vaccination
clinics, she adds.
The
researchers don't believe canine vaccine hesitancy is widespread enough to pose
a current threat to public health in the US, but that could change if vaccine
misinformation and mistrust about animal and human vaccines are not quelled
with sound, scientific data.
"It's
important to remember that it once seemed unthinkable that MMR [Measles, Mumps,
and Rubella] vaccine mandates in public schools might come under attack in
state legislatures across the country," Dr. Matt Motta says. "And,
yet, previous and ongoing research suggests that this is, indeed, the
case."
The study's senior author is Dominik Stecula, assistant professor of political science in the College of Liberal Arts at Colorado State University.