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JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

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Page 1: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION

Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the

R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Page 2: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Where are we now?

1. Initial audit of the use of animals in teaching

2. Survey of attitudes of students towards animal sentience across all years

Page 3: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

1. Survey of animal numbers

• Animal , Type, No. used/ year, Source, Status and Brief description of use

• 1a. Could the educational aim of your course be achieved through the use of fewer animals, using alternatives?

• 1b. If Yes, please indicate what resources you would require to facilitate this

• 1c. If No, please state why this is the case• 2. Please give any further comments on the

use of animals in teaching here

Page 4: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Issues: Animals in veterinary teaching

• Discrepancy between courses in the quality of data.

• Poor response rate to survey (50% of courses)• Data complicated:

by animals owned by staff/students by cadavers used as they come in and not

planned/registered? by use of animals in various modules (eg 5 teaching

horses), but no ‘counts’ of use made. By lack of engagement with the survey!

Page 5: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Issues: Animals in veterinary teaching

Poor understanding of the questions? Eg. Status of animals was not specified in 80% of surveys

Problems with the course organiser’s awareness of actual numbers of animals used in teaching the course content?

Page 6: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Preliminary RESULTS: Animals used, source

Living

Cadaver

Source

Dog 48 Clinical cases & staff/ student ownedCat 18 Clinical cases & staff/ student owned

Mouse

Rat 6 CommercialRabbit 6 Commercial

Frog

Cow 300 4 Farm

Sheep 300 2 Clinical cases

Horse 6 2 R(D)SVS

Chicken

Other 6 Clinical Cases

Page 7: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Suggested reduction/ replacement options

More handling per animal would be an option (according to a few)

Comments on replacement: veterinary teaching and especially differential diagnosis requires the use of living animals, both healthy and diseased

Page 8: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

2. Student survey on animal sentience

Background information

Ownership/ work experience with different species

Understanding of welfare of different species

Source on knowledge on the welfare of different species

The sentience of different animal species

Page 9: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

How sentient would you say these species are?1 (not at all) – 9 (just like us)

Page 10: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Sentience rated by Student year group

Decreasing trend in rated sentience for pets (cats and dogs) in females (from 8.2 in year 1 – 7.4 in year 5)

Increasing trend for production animals (sheep, chicken, pigs) in females(from 6.6 in year 1 – 7.4 in year 5)

No change in sentience levels given by males

Page 11: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Student Background & Sentience

• Pet-owners (cats & dogs) rated sentience for pets higher than rest– 82% owned/ owns a dog– 57% owned/ owns a cat

• Students that grew up in an urban setting rated sentience in pets higher than rest

• Students that grew up in a rural setting rated sentience in production animals lower than rest

Page 12: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

My understanding of their behaviour and welfare is…1 (poor) – 5 (excellent)

Page 13: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

My understanding of their welfare is mainly based on…

Percentage student agreement per knowledge source

a

b

a: Lower compared to all other species

b: Higher compared to all other species

Page 14: JEANNE MARCHIG INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE EDUCATION Animal welfare in the veterinary curriculum at the R(D)SVS: Preliminary findings

Suggestions for future opportunities

• Improved annual audit of all animals & cadavers (and sources), used in teaching at the R(D)SVS

• Focus student groups – to help validate/comprehend students self-assessed understanding of animal welfare.

• Dissemination of information to staff - relating to potential refinement/replacements to animal use in pre-clinical practicals.

• Monitoring the effect of different interventions and replacement models on students’ knowledge and attitudes towards animal welfare throughout their training.