Thinking inside the box: do hiding boxes reduce the fear and stress of hospitalised cats?
Leah Foster+

TL;DR
Hiding boxes may help reduce fear and stress in hospitalised cats, but evidence is moderate and not all studies agree.
Contribution
This paper evaluates the effectiveness of hiding boxes in reducing stress in hospitalised cats through a review of randomized control trials.
Findings
Four of five studies showed reduced stress scores in cats with hiding boxes.
Hiding boxes were more effective for aggressive cats, with faster stress reduction.
Physiological stress measures showed mixed results, with no consistent significant differences.
Abstract
In hospitalised domestic cats, does the use of hiding boxes compared to no intervention reduce fear and stress? Treatment. Five studies were critically reviewed. All five studies were defined by the researchers as randomised control trials. Moderate. Four of the five studies showed moderate evidence that hiding boxes reduce fear and stress in cats, with reduced cat stress scores (CSS) in cats given a hiding box compared to control groups. The hiding box was found more useful in aggressive cats as CSS reduced faster in these groups. Among the three studies that recorded objective physiological stress measures (e.g., temperature, salivary cortisol), two studies showed no statistically significant stress reductions between the hiding box and control groups. Only one study of these three found lower heart rates in hiding box cats, but this may have been influenced by confounding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies · Infection Control in Healthcare · Veterinary Pharmacology and Anesthesia
