Understanding Pet Anxiety: Signs, Causes, and Solutions
Up to 72% of dogs display at least one anxiety-related behaviour. Understanding anxiety dramatically improves your pet's quality of life.
Types of Pet Anxiety
Separation Anxiety
The most diagnosed behavioural issue in dogs.
Signs: Destructive behaviour when alone, excessive barking/howling, house soiling, pacing, drooling, escape attempts, depression when you prepare to leave.
Noise Phobias
Triggers: Thunderstorms, fireworks, construction, vacuum cleaners.
Signs: Trembling, hiding, panting, destructive escape behaviour, clinging to owners, loss of bladder control. Often worsens with age.
Generalised Anxiety
Signs: Hypervigilance, startling easily, inability to settle, excessive grooming (cats get bald patches), reduced appetite, avoidance of new things.
Why Pets Develop Anxiety
- Genetic predisposition (breed-related)
- Lack of early socialisation (3-14 weeks for dogs, 2-7 weeks for cats)
- Traumatic experiences
- Sudden life changes (moving, new baby, loss of companion)
- Inconsistent routine
Anxiety-prone breeds:
Dogs: German Shepherd, Australian Shepherd, Border Collie, Cocker Spaniel, Vizsla, toy breeds
Cats: Siamese, Burmese, Bengal
Solutions
1. Environmental Management
- Safe spaces: covered crate/den, quiet room, high perches for cats
- Enrichment: puzzle feeders, snuffle mats, rotating toys
2. Routine and Predictability
Same feeding times, consistent walks, predictable departure cues, regular play.
3. Desensitisation
Separation anxiety: Practice short departures (30 sec), gradually increase. Pair leaving with high-value treats. Make returns calm.
Noise phobias: Play recordings at very low volume with treats. Gradually increase over weeks.
4. Calming Aids
- Thundershirt (pressure therapy)
- Adaptil (dog pheromones) / Feliway (cat pheromones)
- Calming music
- Supplements: L-theanine, Zylkene (consult vet)
- Medications: Fluoxetine, Trazodone, Gabapentin (vet-prescribed only)
5. Training
- "Place" command — go to bed and relax
- "Look at me" — redirect from triggers
- Confidence building — agility, scent work, tricks
What NOT to do: Don't punish anxious behaviour. Don't force confrontation with fears. Don't ignore hoping they'll outgrow it.
When to Get Help
Consult a veterinary behaviourist if anxiety causes self-harm, severe destruction, aggression, or isn't improving.
Pet Capsule helps log anxiety episodes, track triggers, note which strategies work, and share behaviour logs with your vet.