“A Dog Brings Benefits No Matter Where It’s from”: UK Residents’ Understanding of the Benefits and Risks of Importing Puppies from Romania to the UK
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Ethical Statement
2.2. Survey Design and Content
- Participants’ previous and current dog ownership history, as well as their thoughts or plans regarding acquiring a new dog.
- Questions stemming from a hypothetical online advert for an 8-week-old Cocker Spaniel puppy, examining participants’ perspectives on purchasing the puppy as successive details about its imported background were disclosed, and assessing their understanding of about EU Pet Passport regulations. Some of these results are reported elsewhere [29].
- Questions centred on a second hypothetical online advert for a 16-week-old Jack-a-Poo (Jack Russell cross Poodle) which was identified to have been born in Romania. The advert read “Gorgeous Jack-a-Poo pups, 16 weeks old and ready to scamper into your hearts. Microchipped, wormed, flea treated, fully vaccinated inc rabies, vet checked. Well socialised with kids and pets. Sold with full papers and feeding guide. Home checks insisted on for all buyers. Distance from your home 5 miles”. Respondents were informed that the puppies were legally imported from Romania aged 15 weeks. Subsequent questions explored participants’ perspectives towards imported puppies, and their awareness and perceptions of risks or benefits to the puppies themselves and/or their prospective owners.Pertinent to this paper, respondents were asked whether they could think of any benefits or risks to the welfare of the puppies from being imported to the UK from Romania, and whether they could think of any benefits or risks to a prospective owner’s physical, mental or emotional health from buying an imported puppy. Response options for each were yes, or no. If respondents answered “yes” to any of these four questions, using logic they were given the option to explain their answer(s) in free text.
- Questions exploring respondents’ concern about, and information sources about, “foreign” diseases. Further questions explored their awareness and knowledge of six specific diseases; these results are reported elsewhere [29].
- Demographic questions including respondent age, gender, nationality, any history of having lived outside the UK and whether they had worked with, or owned, dogs born in the European Union.
- Optional further multiple choice and free text questions for current dog owners about where their most recent dog had been sourced and, where relevant, reasons for acquiring a dog born abroad.
2.3. Participant Recruitment
2.4. Content Analysis of Benefits and Risks Free Text Data
3. Results
3.1. Participant Demographics
3.1.1. Dog Ownership Experience
3.1.2. Respondents’ Experience Working with Dogs That Travel to or from the European Union
3.2. Perceived Benefits and Risks to Imported Puppies and Prospective Owners
3.3. Perceived Benefits to the Welfare of Puppies from Being Imported
3.4. Perceived Risks to the Welfare of Puppies from Being Imported
3.5. Perceived Benefits to Prospective Owners of Acquiring an Imported Puppy
3.6. Perceived Risks to Prospective Owners of Acquiring an Imported Puppy
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code Description | Response Number per Code (n = 1133) n (%) | Exemplary Quotes |
---|---|---|
The puppy will have a better life | 594 (52.4%) | Chance of a better life [R2883] A nicer life once on UK soil as long as they are going into suitable homes who have back up and knowledge in helping these dogs [R5336] UK is richer therefore better quality of life [R2070] |
The puppy has been removed/rescued from specific aspects of a difficult life in Romania | 205 (18.1%) | Romanians are horrible to dogs [R3796] The welfare of puppies in Romania is far from the standards that we have in the UK. Dogs are viewed as family members in UK but that’s not the case in Romania [R825] Would be in kill shelters or on streets in Romania [R1914] |
The puppy will be protected by UK animal welfare legislation and attitudes | 160 (14.1%) | We have animal welfare laws in place, including the 5 freedoms [R3731] We have a better reputation and infrastructure for caring for animals in the UK [R6613] The UK is a country of dog lovers [R313] |
The puppy could access some, or better, veterinary treatment | 148 (13.6%) | Better level of vet care [R3327] Someone loving may purchase and take to a vets where it ends up receiving the medical treatment it should have had initially [R4594] Potentially being tested and treated for diseases likely to be contracted abroad, such as leishmaniasis [R5233] |
The puppy will have had more health/veterinary checks due to being imported | 14 (1.2%) | Health-checks carried out prior to travel [R5579] Has had a rabies vaccination-more immunological cover and likely tapeworm treatment [R5813] Extra vaccines, extra vet checks [R5538] |
Other responses which do not fit into the above categories | 12 (1.1%) | Exposure to new experiences during the journey, which is an important part of socialisation [R3259] An excellent socialisation process. Puppy meeting plenty of people, fully vaccinated, trained to travel/crate trained [R3083] Brings in bloodlines from abroad that may be healthier than UK dogs [R517] |
Code Description | Response Number per Code (n = 1367) n (%) | Exemplary Quotes |
---|---|---|
Travelling from Romania may have been stressful, traumatic or dangerous; the puppy may have been exposed to contagious disease or died through travel | 700 (51.2%) | Being in vans for a long time can be scary, especially for young dogs. Probably don’t get much exercise or socialisation [R5383] Risk of disease or injury from transportation, health risk from being kept in hot/cold vehicle, possible dehydration or starvation [R3374] Possible health conditions and stress from flying etc [R3160] |
The puppy’s early life experiences are unknown and/or likely detrimental including their breeding, lack of socialisation, being taken from mum too soon, and/or risks of hereditary illness | 294 (21.5%) | The risk is you have no idea how the mother dog has been kept and treated and of her current health, is she just a breeding machine? [R5650] Poor socialisation would be my primary welfare concern [R2140] Risk of puppy farming in the overseas territory so undetected long term health issues [R4103] |
The puppy might be ill, sick, diseased, poorly treated, stressed, traumatised or dead but the respondent has not specified when/where/why | 143 (10.5%) | Stress, anxiety, illness [R4351] Disease, anxiety, stress, fatigue, malnutrition [R330] Malnourished emotionally scarred [R890] |
Puppy might be carrying a disease, infection or parasite from abroad * | 69 (5.0%) | Rabies and heartworm [R848] Picked up exotic diseases which they brought back with them [R3620] They carry the risk of importing foreign diseases that commonly imported dogs carry like giardia [R4918] |
The puppy might have ongoing behaviour changes related to their early life experiences | 51 (3.7%) | Travelling puts them in a fearful situation with psychological affects later in life [R2963] Impact to behaviour and development from removal from parents and travel to UK [R6937] Risks lack of socialisation in so many areas, not having lived in a home, not having learned to be independent from siblings after 10 weeks old. I would expect this puppy to be scared of human contact and touch [R2347] |
Aspects of the puppy’s background or vaccination status may have been falsified or untraceable–welfare risks implied but not necessarily stated | 39 (2.9%) | You don’t know their background or if the documents are legal [R4324] Probably not vaccinated if the paperwork is fake-disease risk [R7701] Are they really socialised or will they be terrified? [R2646] |
The puppy might not find a suitable new home in the UK | 34 (2.5%) | Not knowing genetic background, or parents could mean they end up in homes where needs cannot be met [R2377] Won’t find a home and end up in a shelter here instead of there [R2841] Possible sale to puppy farmers, dog fight organisers etc. Sale for profit means they may not go to a suitable owner [R5274] |
Risks relating to proliferation of the puppy trade for other puppies | 14 (1.0%) | Supporting illegal trade [R2803] It also concerns me that there are so many dogs who need rescuing in the UK and from Romania, so breeding more dogs could prevent those who need help from getting it [R3909] It will empower the seller to breed more dogs [R5770] |
No specific risks identified but acknowledge they exist | 4 (0.3%) | Unknown issues [R936] So many risks [R5740] |
Risks no different to any puppy | 3 (0.2%) | There is always risk with pets travelling, regardless of age. It is a stressful experience but can be managed [R3131] Same as any dog anywhere-used for breeding/fighting, maltreated [R3605] |
Other responses which do not fit into the above categories | 16 (1.8%) | Subjected to too many vaccines [R6021] No developed immune system for the diseases in this country [R5945] There will be a level of culture shock they go through for things as small as the difference in weather coming from a warm country to the UK [R661] |
Code Description | Response Number per Code (n = 1042) n (%) | Exemplary Quotes |
---|---|---|
Generic benefits from having a puppy, but not specifically because it was imported | 728 (69.9%) | A dog brings benefits no matter where it’s from [R3412] If they really need a puppy for emotional health, then the origin of the puppy is probably irrelevant [R4339] The benefits of having a new puppy generally could outweigh the concern of buying a puppy from overseas for some owners [R4249] |
The owner may feel good from having rescued a puppy | 247 (23.7%) | You could feel a sense of pride at having rescued a puppy from Romania [R777] Smugness over having a Romanian “rescue”, the pinnacle of dog ownership apparently [R7348] Giving a rescued dog a better life enhances all aspects of wellbeing [R3655] |
Other benefits to the owner specific to the puppy having been imported | 67 (6.4%) | Might enable someone who desperately wants or needs a companion to afford one [R1423] Dog was exposed to more things most likely, so the puppy will probably be quick to adapt, saving the owner some levels of stress [R5346] Turned down by other sources when looking for a puppy- some charities set a very high bar when people could actually give a decent home, so this is the only way they can be a pet owner [R7657] Peace of mind that the dog is well bred with no genetic health diseases if research has been done. Peace of mind for breeders that no possibility of close lines [R3791] |
Code Description | Response Number per Code (n = 1299) n (%) | Exemplary Quotes |
---|---|---|
The owner may find the puppy challenging and/or experience stress, worry, distress or guilt from the puppy being ill, unhealthy, dying, having behaviour problems or needing to be rehomed | 521 (40.1%) | A dog with health or behaviour problems can be hard to manage, cut people off from their lifestyle and affect mental health [R7394] The health of the puppy might not be so good and the trauma of losing a pet is horrible [R1378] The risk of physical injury from a semi-feral dog shouldn’t be discounted, but if the dog was just difficult to live with, the owner might feel a failure if he/she had to give up the dog, if they couldn’t cope [R853] |
Puppy might be carrying a disease, infection or parasite from abroad * | 213 (16.4%) | Risk of contagious diseases [R3140] Imported zoonotic diseases e.g., Babesia canis [R6273] Some vets are reluctant to treat dogs from abroad because of Brucellosis Canis. If the dog is tested in the UK and has a positive result vets would probably want to [put them to sleep] [R7135] |
Risks to owner from puppy’s health and/or behaviour problems implied but not specified | 190 (14.6%) | Potential health problems with puppy [R1997] If the puppy were to die of an illness shortly after purchase [R4694] Possibly unsociable puppy that has missed important window of opportunity to fit into new home [R5358] |
The puppy’s veterinary or behavioural treatment could be expensive | 180 (13.9%) | They may have taken on an unhealthy puppy who needs a lot of veterinary attention and the cost of it, which they were probably not expecting or cannot afford [R1564] Unknown parentage could mean health issues so costs more [R4403] If poorly socialised, or has trauma from journey potentially long, and expensive road to getting that pup to be a (bell curve) “normal” adult [R3733] |
The owner may feel guilty, stressed or worried about inadequate/false information about puppy, and/or no support from the breeder | 180 (13.9%) | Any inconsistencies within the paperwork (i.e., forged information) can be incredibly stressful to deal with [R4480] Stress of looking after a 15-week pup, wondering if it’s got good parents, good health scores, free from disease etc [R4652] The guilt the owner might carry if they found out that the puppy was mistreated, or the mum was used for unethical breeding [R4249] |
The risks are no different to a puppy from the UK | 7 (0.5%) | Stress of taking care of a pup eg toilet training [R1298] Potential if things go wrong to cause stress and worry-health care bills, training issues (true of a puppy from anywhere) [R5618] Same as buying puppy in UK [R3213] |
Other responses which do not fit into the above categories | 8 (0.6%) | Communication barrier [R4390] Lots more to consider/check than rabies [R7179] |
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Belshaw, Z.; Youens, E.; Lord, M.; Packer, R.M.A. “A Dog Brings Benefits No Matter Where It’s from”: UK Residents’ Understanding of the Benefits and Risks of Importing Puppies from Romania to the UK. Animals 2025, 15, 2192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152192
Belshaw Z, Youens E, Lord M, Packer RMA. “A Dog Brings Benefits No Matter Where It’s from”: UK Residents’ Understanding of the Benefits and Risks of Importing Puppies from Romania to the UK. Animals. 2025; 15(15):2192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152192
Chicago/Turabian StyleBelshaw, Zoe, Elizabeth Youens, Michelle Lord, and Rowena M. A. Packer. 2025. "“A Dog Brings Benefits No Matter Where It’s from”: UK Residents’ Understanding of the Benefits and Risks of Importing Puppies from Romania to the UK" Animals 15, no. 15: 2192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152192
APA StyleBelshaw, Z., Youens, E., Lord, M., & Packer, R. M. A. (2025). “A Dog Brings Benefits No Matter Where It’s from”: UK Residents’ Understanding of the Benefits and Risks of Importing Puppies from Romania to the UK. Animals, 15(15), 2192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152192