| Literature DB >> 27657140 |
Katherine E Littlewood1, David J Mellor2.
Abstract
The present structured, systematic and comprehensive welfare evaluation of an injured working farm dog using the Five Domains Model is of interest in its own right. It is also an example for others wanting to apply the Model to welfare evaluations in different species and contexts. Six stages of a fictitious scenario involving the dog are considered: (1) its on-farm circumstances before one hind leg is injured; (2) its entanglement in barbed wire, cutting it free and transporting it to a veterinary clinic; (3) the initial veterinary examination and overnight stay; (4) amputation of the limb and immediate post-operative recovery; (5) its first four weeks after rehoming to a lifestyle block; and (6) its subsequent life as an amputee and pet. Not all features of the scenario represent average-to-good practice; indeed, some have been selected to indicate poor practice. It is shown how the Model can draw attention to areas of animal welfare concern and, importantly, to how welfare enhancement may be impeded or facilitated. Also illustrated is how the welfare implications of a sequence of events can be traced and evaluated, and, in relation to specific situations, how the degrees of welfare compromise and enhancement may be graded. In addition, the choice of a companion animal, contrasting its welfare status as a working dog and pet, and considering its treatment in a veterinary clinical setting, help to highlight various welfare impacts of some practices. By focussing attention on welfare problems, the Model can guide the implementation of remedies, including ways of promoting positive welfare states. Finally, wider applications of the Five Domains Model are noted: by enabling both negative and positive welfare-relevant experiences to be graded, the Model can be applied to quality of life assessments and end-of-life decisions and, with particular regard to negative experiences, the Model can also help to strengthen expert witness testimony during prosecutions for serious ill treatment of animals.Entities:
Keywords: amputation; animal welfare assessment; leg injury; negative experiences; positive experiences; quality of life; rehoming as amputee; veterinary evaluation; working dog welfare
Year: 2016 PMID: 27657140 PMCID: PMC5035953 DOI: 10.3390/ani6090058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Details of the fictitious scenario relating to a working farm dog before, during and after a traumatic injury that required amputation of a hind leg and rehoming to a lifestyle block as a pet.
| Stage of the Scenario | Key Features and Events |
|---|---|
| Jess, a four-year-old female, was one of four heading dogs used primarily for herding stock on an extensive sheep farm in the North Island of New Zealand. At night and when not working (about 70% of the time), the dogs were kept beside each other in separate raised runs comprising an open-fronted wooden kennel (1 m long, 1 m wide, 1 m high) and a wire mesh enclosed area (2 m × 1 m × 1 m) with wooden flooring. Tarpaulins were placed over the exposed wire area during extreme weather. The dogs were fed supermarket brand dog biscuits and homekill once daily in the evening, with water available in individual two-litre bowls. The dogs were treated for enteric worms and cutaneous fleas during annual vaccination and health checks at the local veterinary practice. Jess was in poor body condition, including a below average skeletal muscle mass, with a score of 2/5. | |
| In mid-May, Jess and the three other dogs were shifting stock. Towards the end of the day Jess sought to retrieve several sheep from over a rise and did not return. Eventually she was found with her left hind leg, immediately below the hock joint, entangled in barbed wire. Her struggling to free herself had resulted in serious injuries to the affected limb. Using wire cutters from a toolbox on his quad bike the farmer cut Jess free. She struggled throughout the few minutes it took to do this. She had a large open wound to the back of her left hock and her foot was becoming swollen. While holding Jess on his farm bike, the farmer drove over the uneven raceway for 30 min back to the farmhouse. After arranging for Jess to be seen by his local veterinarian, he put her into the back of his enclosed utility vehicle and drove for 30 min to the veterinary clinic in town, arriving at about 6.00 p.m. | |
| The veterinarian found Jess’s heart and respiratory rates were moderately elevated, but apart from a low body condition score, including reduced muscling, she presented as a fit, healthy, younger dog with a wound to her left hind limb. Jess was given a moderate–high dose of morphine intramuscularly. She was not weight bearing on her left leg, having a lameness score 10/10. The laceration was full-thickness, and the left common calcanean tendon on the lower limb had been completely severed. Treatment options included surgery to suture the tendon, surgery to amputate the limb, or euthanasia. The farmer decided on amputation and, given her consequent disability, that Jess would be rehomed on a lifestyle block. Also he requested that costs be minimised. The wound was lightly bandaged and broad-spectrum antibiotic was injected subcutaneously. Jess was led on three legs into an indoor clinic kennel. Water and a small amount of canned food were provided and an Elizabethan collar fitted. When the veterinarian administered another dose of morphine at 11.00 p.m., Jess had consumed the food—a third morphine dose was given at about 3.00 a.m. | |
| After 1 h in the farmer’s utility vehicle Jess arrived at the lifestyle block. Owned by a young couple with two children aged 8 and 10 years, the block accommodated a small flock of sheep, several finisher beef cattle, some chickens and a neutered male Fox Terrier dog. Jess was placed in a garage on a small mattress with a bowl of water nearby and was fed wet food and biscuits. She still required some assistance from a towel sling that evening when toileted on the grass outside. The discharge instructions were followed for the next 10 days. The Elizabethan collar was fitted except when she was being fed. Initially she was very unsettled and repeatedly tried to remove the collar. At suture removal after 10 days, her wound had healed well, the swelling was much reduced and she walked unassisted into the veterinary clinic. Thereafter, her activity levels were progressively increased. She was introduced to the Fox Terrier and the children, becoming increasingly at ease with them, and gradually spent time in a 50-metre square fenced pen containing a comfortable kennel. | |
| About six weeks after the amputation, when supervised, Jess was allowed off lead around the farm. She was also allowed in the house with the family and slept on a luxurious pet bed in the lounge at night. She continued to be offered a variety of premium quality canned dog foods and biscuits twice daily, plus a variety of cooked meats, and was regularly bathed and treated for both fleas and intestinal worms. She now had an average-to-good body condition score of 3/5 with appropriate muscling, could run effectively on three legs, played well with the children, and was occasionally allowed to herd the sheep. Her owners worked in town Monday to Friday between 8.00 a.m. and 6.00 p.m., at which times Jess was placed in the 50-metre square fenced area, with toys for play, a kennel for shelter and fresh water provided. The Fox Terrier had access to the house through a cat flap, but tended to remain outdoors with Jess for companionship. |
Figure 1An abbreviated schema of the Five Domains Model (adapted from [20]) showing negative and positive physical/functional states or situations (Domains 1–4) and their associated negative and positive experiences or affects (Domain 5) relevant to the working farm dog scenario. Taken together, these mental experiences represent the overall Welfare Status of the animal, and the balance between the positive and negative experiences its Quality of Life. A more detailed general schema of the Model is available elsewhere [1].
A conceptual matrix combining welfare compromise and enhancement grades assigned using the Five Domains Model. It shows that as welfare compromise increases, animals’ motivation to engage in behaviours they may find rewarding decreases, reaching zero at the two highest levels compromise [1]. See text for details.
| Welfare Compromise Grade | Welfare Enhancement Grade | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| None 0 | Low-level + | Mid-level ++ | High-level +++ | |
| A None | (A/0) (3) | A/+ | A/++ | A/+++ |
| B Low | B/0 | B/+ | B/++ | – |
| C Mild to moderate (1) | C2/0 | C1/+ | – | – |
| D Marked to severe (2) | D1&2/0 | – | – | – |
| E Very severe | E/0 | – | – | – |
(1) Grade “C” has subdivisions, C1 and C2, representing “mild” and “moderate” compromise, respectively; (2) Grade “D” has subdivisions, D1 and D2, representing “marked” and “severe” compromise, respectively; (3) A theoretical possibility not likely to be encountered in practice because the absence of compromise would require some very low-level enhancement [1].
Welfare compromise and enhancement grades for the six stages of the scenario (Table 1) using the updated Five Domains Model [1]. See text for details. Grades are assigned for Domains 1–5, the overall welfare state being represented by Domain 5 (mental state). Refer to Table 2 and Figure 1 for details of the grading system.
| Stage | Domain | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Nutrition | 2 Environment | 3 Health | 4 Behaviour | 5 * Mental State | |
| 1 Prior to the traumatic injury | C1/0 | B/0 | B/++ | C1/+ | C1/+ |
| 2 The traumatic injury | C2/0 | B/0 | D1/0 | D2/0 | D2/0 |
| 3 Veterinary examination | C1/0 | B/0 | C2/0 | C2/0 | C2/0 |
| 4 Surgical amputation and recovery | |||||
| C2/0 | A/0 | B/0 | C2/0 | C2/0 | |
| B/0 | B/0 | C2/0 | C2/0 | C2/0 | |
| 5 Recuperation in a new home | A/+ | A/+ | B/0 | C1/+ | C1/+ |
| 6 Subsequent life as an amputee | A/+ | A/++ | A/++ | A/+++ | A/+++ |
* Overall welfare status. Welfare compromise grades: A None; B Low; C1 Mild, C2 Moderate; D1 Marked, D2 Severe; E Very severe. Welfare enhancement grades: 0 None; + Low-level; ++ Mid-level; +++ High-level.