“…Factors such as cultural/ethnic identity, gender identity, marital and family status, socioeconomic status, and housing type all contribute to the family system, but are not consistently controlled for in studies on pet ownership (Kazdin, 2015;Purewal et al, 2017;Rodriguez, Herzog, & Gee, 2021). In fact, several studies have found that health effects associated with pet ownership were attenuated or changed when controlling for confounding variables (Goh et al, 2020;Jacobson & Chang, 2018;Marsa-Sambola et al, 2016;Miles, Parast, Babey, Griffin, & Saunders, 2017) or assessing interactions between pet ownership and demographic variables (Liu et al, 2019;Stanley et al, 2014). To inform evidence-based demographic covariates for pet ownership studies, several studies in the United Kingdom have specifically assessed the sociodemographics of pet ownership (e.g.…”