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Animal | 2015

The First Shared Online Curriculum Resources for Veterinary Undergraduate Learning and Teaching in Animal Welfare and Ethics in Australia and New Zealand

Jane Johnson; Teresa Collins; Christopher J Degeling; Anne Fawcett; Andrew D. Fisher; Rafael Freire; Susan J. Hazel; Jennifer Hood; Janice Lloyd; C. J. C. Phillips; K. J. Stafford; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy

Simple Summary There is a need for teaching Animal Welfare and Ethics in veterinary schools and we are developing online resources to meet this need. In this paper we describe how we prioritized the development of these resources by polling experts in the field. Abstract The need for undergraduate teaching of Animal Welfare and Ethics (AWE) in Australian and New Zealand veterinary courses reflects increasing community concerns and expectations about AWE; global pressures regarding food security and sustainability; the demands of veterinary accreditation; and fears that, unless students encounter AWE as part of their formal education, as veterinarians they will be relatively unaware of the discipline of animal welfare science. To address this need we are developing online resources to ensure Australian and New Zealand veterinary graduates have the knowledge, and the research, communication and critical reasoning skills, to fulfill the AWE role demanded of them by contemporary society. To prioritize development of these resources we assembled leaders in the field of AWE education from the eight veterinary schools in Australia and New Zealand and used modified deliberative polling. This paper describes the role of the poll in developing the first shared online curriculum resource for veterinary undergraduate learning and teaching in AWE in Australia and New Zealand. The learning and teaching strategies that ranked highest in the exercise were: scenario-based learning; a quality of animal life assessment tool; the so-called ‘Human Continuum’ discussion platform; and a negotiated curriculum.


Australian Veterinary Journal | 2017

Students’ opinions on welfare and ethics issues for companion animals in Australian and New Zealand veterinary schools

Christopher J Degeling; Anne Fawcett; Teresa Collins; Susan J. Hazel; Jane Johnson; Janice Lloyd; C. J. C. Phillips; K. J. Stafford; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy

Objective To determine what veterinary students in Australia and New Zealand consider important competences in companion animal welfare and ethics (AWE) required on their first day of practice, and to explore how their priorities relate to gender and stage of study. Methods Undergraduate students at all veterinary schools in Australia and New Zealand were sent an online survey. A subset of questions required participants to rank the importance of preselected AWE topics pertaining to companion animals. Data were analysed to determine differences in the way students of different gender or academic stage prioritised each of these AWE topics. Results Of 3220 currently enrolled students, 851 participated in the survey: 79% were female, 17% male, 4% unspecified. Ranking of the AWE topics, from highest to lowest importance, was: neutering, companion animal husbandry, euthanasia, behaviour and training, animal breeding, over‐servicing in relation to animal needs and cosmetic surgery. Female students consistently ranked competency in AWE issues surrounding neutering more highly than male students (P = 0.006). Students in senior years of study ranked the importance of competency in animal abuse/hoarding (P = 0.048), shelter medicine (P = 0.012) and animal breeding (P = 0.002) less highly than those in junior years. Conclusions Australasian veterinary students placed more importance on competency in AWE issues associated with clinical practice (such as neutering and euthanasia) than on professional behaviours (such as over‐servicing and animal breeding). However, we consider that emphasis should still be placed on developing graduate competency in the latter categories to reflect growing societal concerns about companion animal over‐supply and inappropriate professional conduct.


Veterinary Sciences | 2017

Minimising stress for patients in the veterinary hospital: why it is important and what can be done about it

Janice Lloyd

Minimising stress for patients should always be a priority in the veterinary hospital. However, this is often overlooked. While a “no stress” environment is not possible, understanding how to create a “low stress” (sometimes called “fear-free”) environment and how to handle animals in a less stressful manner benefits patients, staff and the hospital alike. Many veterinary practitioners believe creating a low stress environment is too hard and too time consuming, but this need not be the case. With some simple approaches, minimising patient, and hence staff, stress is achievable in all veterinary practices. This article provides a background on why minimising stress is important and outlines some practical steps that can be taken by staff to minimise stress for presenting and hospitalised patients. Useful resources on recognising signs of stress in dogs and cats, handling, restraint, behaviour modification, medications, and hospital design are provided.


Frontiers in Veterinary Science | 2016

An Investigation of the Complexities of Successful and Unsuccessful Guide Dog Matching and Partnerships

Janice Lloyd; Claire Budge; Steven La Grow; K. J. Stafford

Matching a person who is blind or visually impaired with a guide dog is a process of finding the most suitable guide dog available for that individual. Not all guide dog partnerships are successful, and the consequences of an unsuccessful partnership may result in reduced mobility and quality of life for the handler (owner), and are costly in time and resources for guide dog training establishments. This study examined 50 peoples’ partnerships with one or more dogs (118 pairings) to ascertain the outcome of the relationship. Forty-three of the 118 dogs were returned to the guide dog training establishment before reaching retirement age, with the majority (n = 40) being categorized as having dog-related issues. Most (n = 26) of these dogs’ issues were classified as being behavioral in character, including work-related and non-work-related behavior, and 14 were due to physical causes (mainly poor health). Three dogs were returned due to matters relating to the handlers’ behavior. More second dogs were returned than the handlers’ first or third dogs, and dogs that had been previously used as a guide could be rematched successfully. Defining matching success is not clear-cut. Not all dogs that were returned were considered by their handlers to have been mismatched, and not all dogs retained until retirement were thought to have been good matches, suggesting that some handlers were retaining what they considered to be a poorly matched dog. Almost all the handlers who regarded a dog as being mismatched conceded that some aspects of the match were good. For example, a dog deemed mismatched for poor working behavior may have shown good home and/or other social behaviors. The same principle was true for successful matches, where few handlers claimed to have had a perfect dog. It is hoped that these results may help the guide dog industry identify important aspects of the matching process, and/or be used to identify areas where a matching problem exists.


Veterinary Sciences | 2018

Importance of Welfare and Ethics Competence Regarding Animals Kept for Scientific Purposes to Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand

Teresa Collins; Amelia Cornish; Jennifer Hood; Christopher J Degeling; Andrew D. Fisher; Rafael Freire; Susan J. Hazel; Jane Johnson; Janice Lloyd; C. J. C. Phillips; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy

Veterinarians are in a strong position of social influence on animal-related issues. Hence, veterinary schools have an opportunity to raise animal health and welfare standards by improving veterinary students’ animal welfare and ethics (AWE) education, including that related to animals used for scientific purposes. A survey of 818 students in the early, mid, and senior stages of their courses at all eight veterinary schools across Australia and New Zealand was undertaken on their first day of practice (or Day One Competences) to explore how veterinary students viewed the importance of their competence in the management of welfare and ethical decision-making relating to animals kept for scientific purposes. From highest to lowest, the rankings they assigned were: Animal Ethics Committee (AEC) Procedures or Requirements; 3Rs (Replacement, Refinement and Reduction); Humane Endpoints; Euthanasia; “What Is a Research Animal?”; and Conscientious Objections. Female students rated Conscientious Objections, Humane Endpoints, and Euthanasia significantly higher than male students did across the three stages of study. The score patterns for these three variates showed a trend for the male students to be more likely to score these topics as extremely important as they advanced through the course, but female students’ scores tended to decline slightly or stay relatively stable. No gender differences emerged for the three variates: 3Rs (Replacement, Refinement and Reduction); AEC Procedures or Requirements; and “What Is a Research Animal?”. This study demonstrates that understandings of the regulatory and normative frameworks are considered most important in animal welfare and ethics competence in veterinary students. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to investigate what importance veterinary students place on their competence regarding animals kept for scientific purposes.


Veterinary Sciences | 2018

Ranking of Production Animal Welfare and Ethics Issues in Australia and New Zealand by Veterinary Students

Amelia Cornish; Andrew D. Fisher; Teresa Collins; Christopher J Degeling; Rafael Freire; Susan J. Hazel; Jennifer Hood; Janice Lloyd; C. J. C. Phillips; K. J. Stafford; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy

The importance of animal welfare and ethics (AWE) within the veterinary education should reflect community concerns and expectations about AWE, and the professional demands of veterinary accreditation on the first day of practice (or ‘Day One’ competences). Currently, much interest and debate surrounds the treatment of production animals, particularly around live export. To explore the attitudes to AWE of veterinary students in Australia and New Zealand, a survey was undertaken to (i) understand what students consider important AWE topics for initial production animal competence; and (ii) ascertain how these priorities correlated with gender, area of intended practice and stage-of-study. The results from 575 veterinary students showed that all students ranked strategies to address painful husbandry procedures as the most important issues on their first day in production animal practice. Additionally, it was found that the importance students assigned to an understanding of human–animal interactions declined as they progressed through the veterinary course. In contrast, the importance of an understanding of euthanasia issues for production animals increased for male students as they progressed through the course, and remained consistently high in females. Females also gave higher ranking to the importance of understanding production animal stress associated with transport, and ranked strategies to address painful husbandry procedures more important than did males. These findings should help the development of AWE teaching resources that address students’ attitudes and competence and that can be delivered when students are most receptive.


American Journal of Veterinary Research | 2000

Canine antibody response to Blastomyces dermatitidis WI-1 antigen.

Bruce S. Klein; Richard A. Squires; Janice Lloyd; Daniel R. Ruge; Alfred M. Legendre


Journal of Veterinary Medical Education | 2016

Career preferences and opinions on animal welfare and ethics: a survey of veterinary students in Australia and New Zealand

Amelia Cornish; Georgina L. Caspar; Teresa Collins; Christopher J Degeling; Anne Fawcett; Andrew D. Fisher; Rafael Freire; Susan J. Hazel; Jennifer Hood; A. Jane Johnson; Janice Lloyd; C. J. C. Phillips; K. J. Stafford; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy


Journal of Veterinary Medical Education | 2017

The importance of animal welfare science and ethics to veterinary students in Australia and New Zealand

Rafael Freire; C. J. C. Phillips; Joy M. Verrinder; Teresa Collins; Christopher J Degeling; Anne Fawcett; Andrew D. Fisher; Susan J. Hazel; Jennifer Hood; Jane Johnson; Janice Lloyd; K. J. Stafford; Vicky Tzioumis; Paul D. McGreevy


International Journal of Orientation & Mobility | 2009

A Focus Group Discussion on Using Guide Dogs

Janice Lloyd; R. Claire Budge; K. J. Stafford; Steven La Grow

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