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Pet Safety- Protecting Animals When Abuse or Crisis is Present

Pet Safety: Protecting Animals When Abuse or Crisis Is Present

For many people, a pet isn’t “just” an animal — they’re family, comfort, and sometimes the one steady source of love in a frightening home. People who abuse know this, which is exactly why pets are so often drawn into the abuse: threatened, harmed, or used as a way to keep someone from leaving.

If you’ve stayed, or delayed leaving, because you couldn’t bear to abandon your pet — you are not alone, and you have not done anything wrong. Many refuges can’t accept animals, and for a long time that left survivors facing an impossible choice. This guide exists because that choice is no longer the only option.

Inside, you’ll find how to recognise when a pet is being used as part of coercive control, how to plan for your animal’s safety before and during leaving, and the free, confidential UK fostering schemes — from Dogs Trust’s Freedom Project to Cats Protection’s Lifeline and regional services — that will care for your pet in secret until you’re safe and able to be reunited. There’s also guidance for professionals, and a clear list of emergency contacts.

As with everything we share, your safety comes first. Only do what is safe and realistic for your situation. The full guide is below as a Word document you can download, save, and return to whenever you need it.

If you or your pet are in immediate danger: call 999. If you can’t speak safely, dial 999 then press 55 to alert police. The 24-hour National Domestic Abuse Helpline (run by Refuge) is 0808 2000 247; the RSPCA cruelty line is 0300 1234 999.

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A note on identity

NAAVoices was originally founded under a pseudonym to protect my identity. With time and healing I have come to realise that reducing stigma does not come from staying hidden — it comes from openness. Domestic abuse, mental health difficulties, and the need for advocacy happen to people from every walk of life. Speaking openly is an important part of normalising these conversations so that others feel safe to do the same.

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