Abstract

Simple SummaryThe Five Domains Model is now increasingly used to assess the welfare status of a wide range of species in markedly different circumstances. Particular strengths are that the Model facilitates structured, systematic and comprehensive evaluations of animals’ negative and positive mental experiences, the overall balance of which underlies their welfare status or quality of life. Importantly, the Model also clarifies the specific internal and external factors that give rise to those experiences. The welfare evaluation published here is the first to use the most up-to-date version of the Model, and stands as a detailed example that may assist others undertaking such welfare evaluations in other species and contexts. Moreover, it is the first such evaluation of a companion animal. It employs a fictitious scenario involving a working farm dog before, during and after it sustains a serious hind leg injury requiring amputation and its subsequent rehoming as a pet. A wide range of negative and positive experiences are graded, interactions between them are revealed, and the balance between negative and positive states at different stages of the scenario is described. Such Model evaluations can highlight current practices that merit re-evaluation. More generally, when major welfare issues are identified, use of the Model could enhance expert witness participation in related prosecutions by highlighting scientifically supported connections between indicative physical/functional states and behaviours and their associated negative experiences in ill-treated animals. Five Domains Model evaluations can also facilitate quality of life assessments and end-of-life decisions.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.

Highlights

  • This paper provides an example of how animal welfare can be assessed in a structured, systematic and comprehensive fashion using the Five Domains Model

  • The example addresses a fictitious sequence of events involving a working farm dog that sustained a leg injury requiring amputation and subsequent rehoming to a lifestyle block as a pet

  • This analysis will be of interest to companion animal veterinarians and pet owners, as well as to others with an interest in confident and competent animal welfare assessments, including conscientious animal care personnel, members of animal welfare NGOs, those with an interest in rehoming pets, farmers and farm staff, and animal-based scientists

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Summary

Introduction

This paper provides an example of how animal welfare can be assessed in a structured, systematic and comprehensive fashion using the Five Domains Model. The example addresses a fictitious sequence of events involving a working farm dog that sustained a leg injury requiring amputation and subsequent rehoming to a lifestyle block as a pet. Model-based welfare evaluation of the dog before, during and after it sustains a major injury to a hind leg is undertaken in order to show readers how to use the Model It provides a thorough description of the origins and likely character of the negative or positive subjective experiences the dog may have had, and provides detailed examples of the grading of these experiences in terms of welfare compromise or enhancement. The paper ends with a brief discussion of a range of general and specific points raised by the evaluation

The working dog prior to the traumatic injury
The traumatic injury
Veterinary examination
Surgical amputation and recovery
Recuperation in a new home
Subsequent life as an amputee
The Scenario
E Very severe
Welfare Impacts of a Traumatic Injury in a Farm Dog
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Stage 4
Stage 4a
Surgery
Stage 4b
Stage 5
Stage 6
Discussion
Interactions between Welfare Compromise and Enhancement
Grading that Accommodates Serial or Oscillating Changes in Circumstances
Assessment of Clinical Procedures
Other Issues Raised by the Model Analysis
Findings
Wider Applications of the Model
Conclusions

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