
This chart describes pets welcome. Specifically, Finnish children with and without contact with pets were monitored weekly for respiratory symptoms and infections.


The image depicts finish children with or without contacts with pets being monitored for respiratory symptoms and infection. The data indicates that exposing children to pet dander may actually help to aid babies immune systems.


This chart from the Wall Street Journal shows how Finnish children have access to pets and the impact it has on children with regards to allergies and other ailments


A study of Finnish children shows that exposure to pets helps build their immune system. If the pet is a dog or cat, the results seem similar. The more time a pet stays inside the house also raises the health of the child.


The image shows a graph of children who interacted with pets and those who did not. The study was to see if any respiratory issue arose with involvement of pets.


This shows the rates of health related infections in Finnish children based on their exposure to pets that are inside or outside pets and details dogs and cats.


This graph shows Finnish children who have or have not had contact with pets who display respiratory symptoms and infections. The graph was designed to show that exposure to animals will increase and improve a babies immune systems. The chart shows the exposure based on the pets amount of time spent outdoors verses indoors. This chart was created for the Wall Street Journal.


This chart from the Wall Street Journal shows how an experiment in Finland exposed children to pets and measured their propensity for respitory ailments


Children need to have an animal in their life. Be it dog or cat, they need to learn how to coexist with the animals in our immediate vicinity. They need to learn how to care as this graph shows.


The title of the graphic is pets welcome. It says that Finnish children with and without contact with pets were monitored weekly for respiratory symptoms.


This shows the number of weeks that children in Finland remained healthy with either cats or dogs that spent time inside and outside and the number of hours spent outdoors.


This graph shows that researchers believe that having a dog that spends multiple hours outside and then time around babies allow babies to develop stronger immune systems. This correlation is show between number of healthy weeks and hours spent outside on average by the dog. This study also included cats but where disregarded as the difference was not statistically significant. For dogs that spend less than 6 hours inside per day the number of healthy weeks was 75% compared to the 64.8% of babies with dogs who spend no time outside


Pets Welcome: Finnish children with and without contact with pets were monitored weekly for respiratory symptoms and infections. Researchers believe that exposure to dirt and bacteria possibly from pets that outdoors, helps babies immune systems. The graph: percentage of healthy weeks broken up per pet contact: pet inside less than 6 hours pet inside 6 to 16 hours pet inside more than 16 hours a day Pets: Dog, Cat...

