Information about life expectancy related to obesity is most important to cat owners when deciding whether to act on a veterinarian's weight loss recommendation

Author:

Sutherland Katja A.1,Coe Jason B.1,Groves Catherine N. H.1,Shepherd Megan L.2,Grant Lauren E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Medicine, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada

2. Veterinary Clinical Nutrition PLLC, Christiansburg, VA

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To determine the relative importance of information communicated to cat owners during veterinarian-client obesity-related conversations. SAMPLE Cat owner participants recruited via snowball sampling. METHODS A cross-sectional online questionnaire was distributed to cat owners who owned cats of any weight status. A discrete choice experiment design was used to determine the relative importance of obesity-related attributes to cat owners when receiving information from a veterinarian. RESULTS A total of 1,095 questionnaires were analyzed. Participating cat owners resided primarily in Canada and the US. Impact on life expectancy was the most important attribute that would encourage participants to pursue weight management for a cat with obesity (relative importance, 32.66%), followed by change to cost of food (20.40%), future quality of life (20.38%), future mobility (14.40%), and risk of developing diabetes (12.15%). CLINICAL RELEVANCE Findings suggest that cat owners consider the impact on life expectancy to be most important when considering whether to follow a veterinarian's recommendation for their cat to lose weight. When veterinary professionals are communicating about obesity in practice, there is the potential to increase owner engagement in weight management efforts for cats by emphasizing the obesity-related information owners prefer to receive.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

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