Monday, October 27, 2025

 

Why the rise of ‘fur baby’ culture is fuelling overtreatment and major animal welfare issues



A concerned group of veterinary professionals warn that anthropomorphising pets can lead to animal welfare problems.



Taylor & Francis Group




An increasingly-concerned group of veterinarians has issued a stark warning about the rise of what they call ‘fur baby culture’, suggesting the anthropomorphising of animals is behind alarming animal welfare problems.

These veterinarians have detailed their concerns in a new book called Veterinary Controversies and Ethical Dilemmaswhich looks at a range of issues facing the profession including overdiagnosis, overtreatment and corporate profit-chasing. Aimed primarily at veterinary professionals, the book may also be of considerable interest to all pet owners.

In particular, the vet team of authors explores how pets have evolved from working animals to family members, creating what the authors term ‘the profitable 'fur baby' phenomenon’. This shift, they argue, has led to more intensive surgical and medical interventions, many of which are not always in animals' best interests.

The book is edited by veterinary practitioner and wildlife researcher Tanya Stephens; distinguished veterinary anaesthesiologists Professor Eddie Clutton and Polly Taylor; and veterinary neuroscientist and former academic, Kathy Murphy.

Professor Clutton said: “A few vets, us included, see the rise of the “fur baby” as a huge problem for animals and their welfare.

“Some, perhaps many vets, as well as corporate shareholders, see the concept as a tremendously useful way in which to make loads of money.”

The veterinarian team take an unflinching look at how ‘encouraged anthropomorphism’ – treating pets increasingly like human children – can sometimes result in overdiagnosis and overtreatment, that may cause more suffering than benefit.

Tanya Stephens agreed, adding: “And there is a push by some vets to promote and support the human/animal bond as special and essential for human welfare without any acknowledgement that maybe it’s not all it’s cracked up to be and there are some downsides, for the pet as well as the owner.

“In fact village dogs which hang around in groups may have a better quality of life than a designer dog left alone all day. There is no doubt that this emphasis on the human/animal bond supports the rise of the ‘fur baby’.”

The authors challenge the notion that the most expensive or technologically advanced treatment is always best for animals. They advocate moving away from the mythical ‘gold standard’ toward care that considers each animal's individual circumstances and quality of life, along with owner-based concerns such as the financial cost of treatment.

“Better preventative medicine has allowed animals to reach old age, however, longer lives may not necessarily be happier ones if the animal is riddled with old-age ailments and the owner and veterinarian are reluctant to say the last goodbye”, says Tanya Stephens.

Pet owners almost always have good intentions, which the veterinarians acknowledge, but face a huge challenge from mis- and disinformation online, making it difficult to make truly informed decisions about their animals’ care – or even take vet advice at face value.

The veterinarians point out that the rise of social media has been particularly challenging, with influencers sharing ‘health tips’ for pets which aren’t founded in scientific fact or research. Similarly, pet owners will often look up their pet’s symptoms online before an appointment, making it difficult for veterinarians to communicate clinical information.

This ‘fur baby’ phenomenon, the authors argue, is stoked by some in the industry driven by a profit focus. In fact, the authors share a concern many pet owners share: escalating veterinary expenses.

The expert team behind the new book also examine how practice corporatisation and the involvement of global financial organisations in animal care will affect the cost and delivery of animal healthcare.

Dr Murphy questions: “Is there even a place for profit generation in caring professions, when we consider that clients are paying for the cost of their services plus whatever is needed to maximise growth of the company?”

With all these challenges, it is perhaps unsurprising that recent surveys cited in the book show widespread dissatisfaction, high stress, understaffing, long working hours, and abuse of veterinary staff. Similarly, many veterinarians struggle with trying to balance what is best for the animal and what is best for the owner, bearing in mind factors such as financial hardship and caregiver burden.

Rather than criticising pet owners or veterinarians, the book’s creators attempt to foster better understanding of the complex factors affecting animal healthcare. The editors hope their work will lead to ‘better public awareness and appreciation of the veterinary surgeon’s role in society.’

They hope the book serves as both a wake-up call and a guide for navigating the changing landscape of animal healthcare. By understanding these challenges, pet owners can make more informed decisions and work more effectively with their veterinary teams to ensure the best outcomes for their animal companions.

 

Music therapy during surgery reduces anesthetic use and stress responses



A new study to be published in Music&Medicine reveals that intraoperative music therapy significantly reduces the amount of propofol required during laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed under general anesthesia. This research suggests




International Association for Music and Medicine





ATLANTA, Oct. 28, 2025 — A groundbreaking study published in the peer-reviewed journal Music and Medicine demonstrates that intraoperative music therapy significantly reduces the amount of propofol and fentanyl required during laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed under general anesthesia. Patients exposed to therapeutic music also experienced smoother awakenings and lower physiological stress, as measured by decreased perioperative cortisol levels.

“These findings show that this is more than just simple background music, rather an integration of a novel intervention into anesthetic practice,” said Dr. Tanvi Goel, principal investigator and anesthesiologist at Lok Nayak Hospital and Maulana Azad Medical College in New Delhi, India.

“By delivering intraoperative music, we’re engaging the patient’s nervous system even under anesthesia—blunting the neuroendocrine stress response when the body is most vulnerable,” added Dr. Farah Husain, co-investigator and certified music therapist.

“The auditory environment under anesthesia is often neglected, but sound—when delivered with therapeutic intent—may accelerate healing, reduce stress, and improve recovery in ways we are only beginning to quantify,” noted Dr. Sonia Wadhawan, Director Professor of Anesthesia and Intensive Care at Maulana Azad Medical College.

Key findings of the study include:

  • Reduced anesthetic needs: Patients in the music group required significantly less propofol and fentanyl.
  • Smoother awakenings: Participants experienced gentler, more comfortable recovery from anesthesia.
  • Lower stress response: Perioperative cortisol levels were substantially reduced compared with controls.

“This study adds to the growing empirical evidence that the neural effects of patient-preferred music translate to behavioral benefits,” said Wendy L. Magee, PhD, Professor of Music Therapy at Temple University’s Boyer College of Music and Dance. “For people with disorders of consciousness following brain injury, patient-preferred music improves arousal and cognition. This research furthers the evidence that music with personal meaning enhances salience and emotional impact—maximizing music’s neural effects and supporting recovery.”


https://news.temple.edu/news/2025-07-24/temple-researcher-uses-music-fill-gaps-consciousness-assessment-children-brain

“This study shows the real potential of music to improve anesthetic care, but we must go further,” said Joseph J. Schlesinger, MD, FCCM, Professor of Anesthesiology, Critical Care Medicine, Hearing & Speech Sciences, and Biomedical Engineering at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. “To truly understand how music affects the brain during surgery, we need multimodal EEG and a broader view of the perioperative sound environment that includes both patient outcomes and provider safety.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772501422000264

“These findings open the door for future studies to expand sample sizes, explore music therapy across general anesthesia for different types of surgery, and develop standardized music protocols that could be implemented in hospitals worldwide.” Fred J Schwartz, MD Editorial Commentary from Music and Medicine- 

https://www.linkedin.com/in/fred-schwartz-066b88a2



Funding & Disclosures

The authors declare no competing financial interests or conflicts of interest related to this research.

 

FOREVER CHEMICALS


High levels of short-chain PFAS found in Wilmington residents’ blood



North Carolina State University





In a new study, researchers found high levels of ultrashort-chain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in blood samples taken from Wilmington, N.C. residents between 2010-2016. Two ultrashort-chain PFAS – perfluoromethoxyacetic acid (PFMOAA) and trifluoracetic acid (TFA) – were detected at high levels in almost every sample. In contrast, GenX – the chemical that jumpstarted public concern about PFAS in the Cape Fear River Basin – was detected in 20% of the samples. The work adds to the body of evidence that short-chain PFAS can accumulate in the human body.

Ultrashort-chain PFAS such as PFMOAA and TFA have not been well-studied in people for two reasons: they were not thought to bioaccumulate due to their chemical structure, and until recently there were no analytical methods that allowed scientists to reliably detect them in blood.

“With the development of analytical methods targeting ultrashort-chain PFAS, researchers have found these compounds to be the dominant PFAS in environmental matrices including water and human blood,” says Detlef Knappe, professor of civil, construction, and environmental engineering at NC State and co-corresponding author of the study. “Given the long history of PFAS exposure in Wilmington, we wanted to look for these compounds in historical water and blood samples of residents.”

In 2016, NC State and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency researchers published findings highlighting high concentrations of several PFAS, including GenX, in Wilmington residents’ drinking water. The Fayetteville Works plant, an upstream chemical facility, had been releasing PFAS into the Cape Fear River, the city’s primary drinking water source, since 1980. After 2017, the chemical manufacturer was required to control PFAS discharges into the river and air.

For the current study, the researchers looked for 56 different PFAS in water samples from the Cape Fear River taken in 2017 as well as in 119 adult blood serum samples from a UNC biobank that were collected between 2010-2016. The serum samples were anonymized, but all were taken from residents in and around the Wilmington area.

The findings were surprising. In the blood serum, 34 of the 56 PFAS were detected in at least one serum sample. Five PFAS accounted for 85% of the total found in the samples. PFMOAA had the highest median concentration at 42 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL), comprising 42% of the summed total, followed by TFA (17 ng/mL), PFOS (14 ng/mL), PFOA (6.2 ng/mL), and PFPrA (5.4 ng/mL).

Additionally, they found that TFA comprised 70% of the total PFAS in the 2017 water sample, with a concentration of 110,000 nanograms per liter (ng/L). PFMOAA had a concentration of 38,000 ng/L. While TFA has a variety of sources, including fluorinated refrigerants, the publication highlights that Fayetteville Works was the dominant source of both TFA and PFMOAA in the lower Cape Fear River.

“For reference, one European guideline recommends a drinking water level of 2200 ng/L for TFA,” Knappe says. “Our sample contained over 50 times that concentration.”

“These data gave us a ‘timestamp’ of exposure before people knew their drinking water was contaminated,” says Jane Hoppin, professor of biological sciences, principal investigator of the GenX Exposure Study, member of NC State’s Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE), and co-corresponding author of the paper describing the work.

“The conventional wisdom is that short-chain PFAS are of lesser concern because they don’t bioaccumulate, but what we’re seeing is that they can occur at high levels in people,” Hoppin adds. “These results point out the need to start thinking about how to study the human health effects of these PFAS, particularly TFA and PFMOAA.

“The other issue is how limited the human health data are for any of these chemicals. Most chemicals in the PFAS class affect the liver and immune system, but this work is still in its infancy in many cases.”

Next steps include analyzing samples from the GenX Exposure Study for TFA and PFMOAA levels.

“The sample set gives us a glimpse into the past,” Hoppin says. “Seeing what the levels are now will help us determine how these chemicals accumulate in the body and what their health effects might be.”

The study appears in Environmental Science and Technology and was supported by research funding from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (1R21ES029353, P42ES0310095), Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE) at NC State University (P30ES025128), and the North Carolina Collaboratory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with funding appropriated by the North Carolina General Assembly. Other NC State collaborators were Lan Cheng, Sarah Teagle, Jeffrey R. Enders and Rebecca A. Weed. Hazel B. Nichols from UNC-Chapel Hill’s Gillings School of Public Health also contributed to the work.

-peake-

Note to editors: An abstract follows.

“Historical Blood Serum Samples from Wilmington, North Carolina: The Importance of Ultrashort-Chain Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances”

DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5c08146

Authors: Lan Cheng, Sarah Teagle, Jeffrey R. Enders, Rebecca A. Weed, Detlef R.U. Knappe, Jane A. Hoppin, North Carolina State University; Hazel B. Nichols, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Published: Oct. 27 in Environmental Science and Technology

Abstract:
From 1980 to 2017, Wilmington, North Carolina (NC), residents unknowingly consumed high levels of PFAS through drinking water. Some of these PFAS are expected to have short biological half-lives, and current biological sampling will miss these exposures. To assess historical PFAS exposures, we (1) determined PFAS levels in serum samples of Wilmington, NC residents obtained during the years 2010−2016, (2) examined temporal trends of serum PFAS over this period, and (3) associated serum PFAS levels with PFAS concentrations in drinking water. We quantified 56 PFAS, including ultrashort-chain PFAS, in 119 adult human serum samples and 47 PFAS in water samples from 2017. Twenty PFAS were detected in >50% of serum samples; perfluoromethoxyacetic acid (PFMOAA) and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) exhibited the highest median concentrations (PFMOAA: 42 ng/mL; TFA: 17 ng/mL). PFMOAA and TFA were also the dominant PFAS in Wilmington drinking water, accounting for 95% of quantifiable PFAS. The serum-to-water ratio was linearly correlated with “effective” PFAS chain length, indicating that PFAS with longer chain length and a sulfonic acid group are more bioaccumulative. While chain length is important for bioaccumulation, this study highlights that exposures to high concentrations of ultrashort-chain PFAS in drinking water contribute to their dominance in human serum.

 

Self-affirmations can boost well-being, study finds



Brief exercises focusing on values and identity have lasting benefits for overall mental health



American Psychological Association





Self-affirmations – brief exercises in which people reflect on their core values, identity and positive traits – can increase people’s general well-being and make them happier in small but significant ways, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

“Even brief, low-cost self-affirmation exercises can yield significant psychological benefits in terms of enhancing personal and social well-being,” said study author Minhong (Maggie) Wang, PhD, of The University of Hong Kong. “More importantly, these benefits are both immediate and long-lasting.”

The research was published in the journal American Psychologist.

Previous research has suggested that self-affirmation exercises can have specific benefits, such as improving underrepresented students’ academic performance and increasing people’s motivation to quit smoking. The exercises work by reminding people of their inner strengths and acting as a buffer against external threats and worries. In the current study, Wang and her colleagues wanted to investigate whether self-affirmations also have more general positive effects on people’s well-being, and if so, whether those effects are short-lived or long-lasting.

To answer those questions, they reviewed data from 129 studies of self-affirmations published in peer-reviewed journals, with a total of 17,748 participants. To be included in the analysis, each study had to involve a standalone self-affirmation exercise – the self-affirmation could not be part of a larger intervention – and include at least one outcome measure related to well-being. Outcome measures were grouped into four categories: general well-being (mood and life satisfaction); social well-being (sense of community and belonging); self-perception and sense of self-worth; and reduced barriers to well-being (negative symptoms like anxiety or negative mood).

Seventy-eight of the studies were conducted in the United States, 10 in Europe, six in Asia, and the rest in different or unspecified countries. Most of the studies (89) were conducted with college students, 13 included participants aged 12 to 18, and 27 included general adult participants aged 18 to 72.

Overall, the researchers found that self-affirmations had positive effects on people’s general well-being, social well-being, and self-perception and sense of self-worth. The self-affirmations also reduced negative symptoms such as anxiety and negative mood. These effects did not dissipate immediately – they persisted over time, with an average follow-up time of nearly two weeks across the studies.

The effects held true for teens, college students and adults, and held true across countries. However, the effect of self-affirmations on self-perception was stronger for adults compared with adolescents, and the effect on general well-being was stronger for American participants compared with Asian and European participants.

“The findings advocate for integrating self-affirmation strategies into well-being programs, particularly in schools and universities,” said Wang. “Educators and parents can use self-affirmation strategies to provide immediate psychological support to help students navigate challenges and build resilience in difficult situations. These strategies can foster individual and social well-being as well as strengthen social connections within communities.”

Because much of the research on self-affirmations so far has been conducted with U.S. college students, future studies should aim to broaden the scope of research to include adolescents, more adults, and cross-cultural groups, Wang said.

Article: “The Impact of Self-Affirmation Interventions on Well-Being: A Meta-Analysis,” by Yunian Zhang, MSN, Boyin Chen, MSc, and Minhong Wang, PhD, The University of Hong Kong; and Xinyang Hu, MSc, Oxford University. American Psychologist, published online Oct. 27, 2025.

CONTACT: Minhong (Maggie) Wang, PhD, can be reached at magwang@hku.hk

The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States. APA’s membership includes  173,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance the creation, communication and application of psychological knowledge to benefit society and improve lives.