Why Are So Many Dogs on Prozac?

Too Many People Own Dogs​

If you love dogs, maybe don’t get one.​

By Rose Horowitch

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Illustration by Paul Spella / The Atlantic. Source: Getty.

OCTOBER 22, 2023, 7:30 AM ET

Marcia Munt was 47 when she adopted her first dog. It was 2020, the height of the pandemic, and her house felt empty. Maisie was a nine-week-old bundle of cream-colored fur and lopsided ears. But Munt, a consultant in Sacramento, soon became convinced that the dog was not normal. Maisie howled at any stimulus. She paced all night and pounced on anyone who came to the house. Munt, who had only ever owned cats, couldn’t understand why anyone would choose to have a dog. “I had been the best dog mother I could be,” she told me. But she spent much of that first year in tears.

Maisie’s vet prescribed fluoxetine, better known as Prozac, but it ruined the dog’s appetite. Munt then turned to Melissa Bain, a veterinary behaviorist with a wider pharmaceutical arsenal. Maisie now takes venlafaxine, an antidepressant, and gabapentin, an anticonvulsant, with an option for the sedative clonidine in particularly fraught situations. “It’s a bit of a cocktail that is always being adjusted,” Munt said. She spends hundreds of dollars each month on Maisie’s care and considers it well worth it. Perhaps the most valuable treatment Bain offered, however, was for the human, not the dog. “Honestly, it just felt cathartic in many ways,” Munt told me. “She said, ‘It’s Maisie. It’s not you. You have done everything you need to do.’”

The rise in anxiety among American humans has been exhaustively documented. With much less fanfare, we also seem to have entered the age of the anxious canine. Last fall, a New York Times wellness column offered earnest advice on “How to Handle Your Pet’s Anxiety”; the author, reporting that veterinarians were observing an uptick in stressed-out animals, noted that two of her editors had cats on Prozac. In a 2016 study, 83 percent of veterinary general practitioners reported prescribing dogs anti-anxiety medication. (In the 1990s, some began prescribing Prozac off-label; the FDA approved a version for treating dog separation anxiety in 2007.) Although there are no comprehensive statistics on the share of dogs on prescription anxiety meds, more than half of American dog owners said that they buy “calming” products including pheromone spray and Lycra jumpsuits, according to the American Pet Products Association’s 2023–24 pet-owners survey. Google searches for dog anxiety have roughly tripled over the past decade. Many of America’s 85 veterinary behaviorists are booked months in advance. The seven I spoke with said that the number of people seeking pet mental-health care has exploded in the past few years. But there is no consensus as to why.

One theory is that dogs today really are more anxious. Rather than buying from a breeder, more Americans are choosing to adopt. According to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, shelters are euthanizing nearly two-thirds fewer animals than they were a decade ago. Adoption saves lives, but it sometimes leaves traumatized pets with inexperienced owners. Meanwhile, we’ve also altered the way pets live. Pet dogs (and cats) used to spend more time outside; now, experts told me, they’re much more likely to stay indoors. When they do go outside, they’re kept on leashes or under supervision. As Americans have fewer kids, they’ve begun to think of their pets as children and to act as “helicopter” fur-parents, the bioethicist Jessica Pierce told me. Animals tend to live longer under these conditions, but they miss out on mental stimulation and interaction with their own species. That might make them anxious or aggressive toward people and other dogs. The pandemic dog-buying spike heightened all of these dynamics, as millions of dogs spent their first years socially distancing.

Still, the proliferation of medicated dogs might say more about their owners. Vet behaviorists are mostly clustered in liberal areas; so are human anxiety diagnoses. Amy Pike started her career practicing in rural Kentucky, where her client list was short. Now she serves pet owners in D.C., Maryland, and Virginia, and business is booming. In Pike’s view, that’s because her new neighbors have a healthy respect for the science around pet mental health and medication. She and other vet behaviorists believe that dogs have always been anxious, and that the welcome destigmatization of human mental-health issues has allowed us to finally recognize their suffering. But it could be that anxious adults are projecting their own issues onto their furry companions. Some dog owners have clearly begun to pathologize normal dog habits. A 2019 survey concluded that 85 percent of dogs had behavioral problems; almost half of the owners reported that their pet had anxiety. The numbers seem incredible, until you look at the list of bad behaviors. Repetitive behaviors like digging in the yard or displaying a “tennis ball fetish” qualified, as did excessive barking. What people classify as a behavioral issue, said Pierce, the bioethicist, reflects human expectations as much as a dog’s nature.

So is the dog-anxiety crisis real, or is it a product of owners’ anxiety-riddled psyches? Dogs can’t tell us how they’re feeling, so we’ll probably never know. But both explanations are depressing. Either humans are stressing dogs out so much that they truly need prescription meds, or owners are putting their dogs on unnecessary psychoactive drugs to address annoying but normal dog habits. It might be time, in other words, to reevaluate the way we approach dog ownership. Many Americans don’t have the time, energy, or green space their pets need to thrive. If the choice is to medicate our dogs or to make them, and ourselves, miserable, pet ownership starts to seem ethically murky. “Ideally, a lot fewer people would own dogs and cats,” Pierce told me.

That’s a hard message for pet lovers to hear. When I was growing up, my family had a labradoodle named Trixie. For much of her life, she was a dog-park dog, happiest when chasing tennis balls and sniffing puppy butts. But about halfway through her 15 years, she was bitten by another dog. After the incident, Trixie snarled and snapped at other dogs she met. We spent less time at the park.

My conversations with pet behaviorists made me wonder if I had failed her. It hadn’t occurred to me to slather Xanax in peanut butter and slip it into her kibble. Had I missed the signs that my dog needed treatment? I asked Bain, the veterinary behaviorist, about this. I could sense that she thought the answer was yes. But she was gentle about it. “Were you a bad owner when your dog barked at other dogs?” she asked. I began fumbling out a response, but she interrupted me. “No. No. No. You weren’t,” she said. “You didn’t know any better.”

It was kind of her to reassure me. But I was still left to wonder whether medicating dogs is in their best interest—or ours.

Source (Archive)
 
The people who stuff their dogs full of Prozac are the ones that will cry about fireworks because of poor doggo crying about it twice a year, when in reality, pets will get used to every sound eventually.

Hell, in Black Beauty, one of the very first books on animal welfare, discussed how animals living next to railroad tracks won't even bat an eye after they're used to trains going through.
I swear 80% of dogs that get freaky about fireworks/storms/etc. are that way because their people overly fussed/became stressed themselves because they thought the dog would get upset that it became a feedback loop. Now, some dogs that have been lost for several months out in nasty weather? Yeah, they have issues with storms.

If our dogs started barking or fussing because of weather or anything like that, I'd just tell them "shut up, it's not important." in the same tone of voice as them barking at squirrels out the window. Generally they'd realize I wasn't upset, and they'd settle.
 
They also cost much more than they used to. Totally normal puppies from common breeds are now $1k or more, and the puppy mill store near my house charges $5-7k for their little designer breed bullshit puppies.
"ADOPT NOT SHOP!!!!!!!" not when 90% of the dogs in the kennel are pitbulls and the other 10% get snatched up by specialized breed rescues or by other people.

Dogs should be outside running around and chasing squirrels.
No, they should be stimulating their mind. A dog that does ten minutes of sniffing is equivalent to an hour of exercise for a dog. And keeps them tired longer.

much exercise was the dog getting
Again, doesn't necessarily need exercise but it DOES need mental stimulation. Teaching it new tricks. Hiding food in places and having it sniff to find. Treat toy stimulation. Sniffer rugs for their treats (don't feed your dog kibble if you know what's good for you, btw). Taking it on a walk and letting it sniff around for ten minutes. This is more beneficial to the dog than letting it tire itself out via running around.

I swear 80% of dogs that get freaky about fireworks/storms/etc. are that way because their people overly fussed/became stressed themselves because they thought the dog would get upset that it became a feedback loop.
This is what happens. You pet your dog, cooing to it during a storm, you're encouraging it to keep doing this. My mother did this with both her dogs and they're both terrified of storms and loud noises. They also go wild in the car, aggressively panting and whining and trying to stand on the car arm rest to look outside. My dog sits there quiet, unbothered by the storm and doesn't go wild in the car. You pet your dog when it panics or gets whiny and it will learn this behavior is the right thing to do.
 
proliferation of medicated dogs might say more about their owners. Vet behaviorists are mostly clustered in liberal areas; so are human anxiety diagnoses.

Urbanoids can't ever resolve a problem, only manage it with a monthly subscription service. In this case it's drugs.

Maisie howled at any stimulus.

Say no when she howls and throw a shoe at her. Not hard.

She paced all night and pounced on anyone who came to the house.

Teach her down and then say no and throw a shoe at her when she gets up.

Repetitive behaviors like digging in the yard or displaying a “tennis ball fetish” qualified, as did excessive barking

Marking and punishing will immediately fix all these OCD behaviors.

This is all common knowledge for people in rural areas where dogs have to be good and also work to survive. The LIMA behaviorists and vets are the reason dogs are on Prozac. It's expensive and easier to sell to cat ladies than corporal punishment.
 
Marcia Munt was 47 when she adopted her first dog. It was 2020, the height of the pandemic, and her house felt empty. Maisie was a nine-week-old bundle of cream-colored fur and lopsided ears. But Munt, a consultant in Sacramento, soon became convinced that the dog was not normal. Maisie howled at any stimulus. She paced all night and pounced on anyone who came to the house.

Congratulations you have a puppy.

This is like when people who have never had cats get a kitten and are baffled by the fact that their failure to kitten proof has left belongings shredded, electric cords chewed and food gotten into. Oh, and you are now a human tree.

I feel bad for all the pandemic pets adopted because people were bored.
Either humans are stressing dogs out so much that they truly need prescription meds, or owners are putting their dogs on unnecessary psychoactive drugs to address annoying but normal dog habits.

I think it's mostly the latter. And since there's currently no pandemic pet boom maybe it will start leveling out a bit. You got a dog because bored at home during Wuflu. But surprise! Dogs are living creatures. They aren't Furbies. They require your attention to thrive. Puppies and kittens are very clingy because they're babies. Your puppy pacing and howling is like a two year old screaming "Mom! Mom! Mom!" incessantly. So do something. Take the puppy for a walk. Play with it. Just hang out with it. Make sure you socialize your puppy too. Otherwise you could have big problems when it becomes an adult. There's too many reactive dogs that spend most of their time locked in the house or tied up in the yard.
 
Teach her down and then say no and throw a shoe at her when she gets up.
my parents have a few retarded small dogs, they bite people, piss on the couches, tear up shoes, harass the cats etc. past the age where it’s acceptable. my parents response to this is similar to the millennial/gen-z parents who use the “gentle parenting” tactic on their kids, like only trying to reason with words or a spray bottle that the dogs see as a reward rather than punishment. you can’t use nice words to make a dog stop pissing on the couch, you have to use a real punishment that actually sticks. i got shit for pulling out my slipper on one of them for running across the room to bite my leg, surprise surprise months later the biting problem hasn’t gone away.

the impression i’ve gotten from their “discipline” styles is they treat the dog too much like a spoiled child. i think there’s a lot of dog owners like that nowadays, especially the ones that call themselves “dog moms”. they see disciplining their shitty dog as the equivalent to physical child abuse, and just like an unchecked child they get put on medication and grow up fucked. there are a lot of parallels between current parents and dog owners when you think about it.
 
I feel bad for all the pandemic pets adopted because people were bored.
I think this is a huge part of it. So many people found themselves suddenly not going out to work or having children at home rather than school and a puppy seemed like the perfect idea - after all, how many people say that they’d have (more) kids or dogs if they had the time? Suddenly lots more people had the time.

In response every backyard breeder suddenly had litters, prices went through the roof and buyers chose dogs based on availability rather than suitability, temperament or breeding. These poorly-bred and poorly-considered puppies were then raised in homes that were observing rules limiting time outside and socialisation -especially in the liberal areas highlighted in the article. Now that those owners are returning to school or the office they’re looking for a quick fix and something else to blame.
 
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