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The study points to dog ownership enhancing the effects of other protective lifestyle measures like not socially isolating and exercising regularly.

Current dog owners (8.6 %) had an odds ratio (OR) of 0.60 (95 %CI: 0.37-0.977) of having disabling dementia compared to past and never owners. For cat ownership, the corresponding OR was 0.98 (95 %CI: 0.62-1.55). Current dog owners with a regular exercise habit had an OR of 0.37 (0.20-0.68) compared to past and never dog owners with no exercise habit. Further, current dog owners with no social isolation had an OR of 0.41 (0.23-0.73) compared to past and never dog owners with social isolation. Dog ownership had a suppressive effect on incident disabling dementia after adjusting for background factors over a 4-year follow-up period. Specifically, dog owners with an exercise habit and no social isolation had a significantly lower risk of disabling dementia.

It might be great if cities pair animal shelters up with nursing homes so that the weaker members of society - human or canine - can have their emotional needs met

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What about ai dog does that count?

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45 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux 14h

dementia guaranteed

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Too early to tell

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I have 3 cats and people still call me crazy :)

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12 sats \ 0 replies \ @adlai 23h

correlation can imply causation if the presence of multiple factors causes stronger reinforcement

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I'm always concerned about selection bias, dogs aren't exactly randomly assigned. The results pass the sniff test, though.

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