Abstract

Simple SummaryVeterinary care of companion animals, particularly dogs and cats, continues to advance, with some companion animals receiving a standard of care equal to or exceeding that of human patients. While this has the potential to improve animal welfare and benefit other stakeholders, including animal owners and veterinary team members, it also poses ethical challenges. We discuss key ethical challenges associated with AVC, including its relationship to standards of veterinary care, its potential to perpetuate poor quality of life and suffering, cost and accessibility of veterinary care, conflicts of interest, and concerns about experimentation without appropriate ethical review. We conclude by suggesting some strategies for veterinary teams and other stakeholders, such as professional bodies and regulators, to address these concerns.Advanced veterinary care (AVC) of companion animals may yield improved clinical outcomes, improved animal welfare, improved satisfaction of veterinary clients, improved satisfaction of veterinary team members, and increased practice profitability. However, it also raises ethical challenges. Yet, what counts as AVC is difficult to pinpoint due to continuing advancements. We discuss some of the challenges in defining advanced veterinary care (AVC), particularly in relation to a standard of care (SOC). We then review key ethical challenges associated with AVC that have been identified in the veterinary ethics literature, including poor quality of life, dysthanasia and caregiver burden, financial cost and accessibility of veterinary care, conflicts of interest, and the absence of ethical review for some patients undergoing AVC. We suggest some strategies to address these concerns, including prospective ethical review utilising ethical frameworks and decision-making tools, the setting of humane end points, the role of regulatory bodies in limiting acceptable procedures, and the normalisation of quality-of-life scoring. We also suggest a role for retrospective ethical review in the form of ethics rounds and clinical auditing. Our discussion reenforces the need for a spectrum of veterinary care for companion animals.

Highlights

  • We explore ethical challenges posed by the advanced veterinary care of companion animals

  • The costs of advanced veterinary care (AVC) occur in the context of rising costs of veterinary care in general, for companion animals [52]

  • We have outlined concerns about AVC identified in the veterinary ethics literature, including poor quality of life or negative impacts on animal welfare, dysthanasia, increased caregiver burden, financial costs and impacts on accessibility, conflicts of interest and a lack of oversight for what amounts to experimentation

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Summary

Introduction

According to The CALLISTO Project, the term “companion animal” refers to “domesticated, domestic-bred or wild caught animals, permanently living in a community and kept by people for company, amusement, work (e.g., support for blind or deaf people, police or military dogs) or psychological support—including dogs, cats, horses, rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs, reptiles, amphibians, birds and ornamental fish” [2]. According to Knesl and colleagues, “the strengthening of the bond between humans and their pets has changed the landscape for veterinary medicine, with highly bonded owners showing an increasing willingness to do whatever it takes to maintain the health of their animals” [5] To this end, it could be said that companion animal practice has co-evolved with the human–. First, it is important to explore what we mean by advanced veterinary care

What Constitutes Advanced Veterinary Care?
Financial Cost and Accessibility of Veterinary Care
Conflicts of Interest
When Does Advanced Veterinary Care Become Experimentation?
How Can We Address Ethical Concerns Associated with Advanced Veterinary Care?
Findings
Conclusions
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