Animal Position Statements Flashcards
1
Q
dominance theory position statements key points
A
- Theory that individuals will submit or defer to the dominant individual when they are present
- dominance is all about priority access to resources
- often humans want leadership of an animal (animal willing to perform behaviours willingly) rather than a dominant relationship
- Advised not to use dominance theory in dog training. No scientific proof.
2
Q
Breed-specific legislation position statement key points
A
- Breed-specific legislation used to try and decrease dog bites towards humans. Not a solution, leads to a false sense of security for communities and poor welfare towards certain breeds.
- Better solutions: adequate house placement, early socialization/training, owner education
- issues with breed identification/poor labelling
- aggression mostly occurs from fear, more likely in resident dogs (dogs with little human interaction; chained in yard)
- can have other negative effects (O avoids vet care such as vaccinations, training)
3
Q
Puppy socialization
A
- most important in first 3 months of life
- behavioural issues are number one cause of relinquishment to shelters and number one cause of death of dogs under 3yrs
- puppies can start puppy training classes as early as 7-8 weeks, giving vaccine and deworming 7 days prior to class and keeping vaccines up to date as they age
4
Q
Humane dog training
A
- use reward based methods (better effectiveness)
- reward training results in greater attentiveness to owner and greater dog-human bond
- cortisol present in both positive and negative emotional states so not a good indicator
- aversive method training results in higher pessimistic behaviours
- use systematic desensitization (not flooding or exposure plans) which involves gradual exposure to a stimulus
5
Q
Positive vet care position statement
A
- Vet practice promoting calm emotions for patients and caregivers
- avoid stress which can lead to emotional distress and to fight, flight, freeze response resulting in fear response at all future visits
- Anxiety and fear lead to increased cortisol, blood glucose, pupil dilation and muscle tension, increased vitals which can hinder accurate diagnosis and lead to anesthetic and sedation risk
- fear of vet leads to less vet visits and a increase in preventable illness and behaviours
- advise using counter-conditioning to create a positive association
- Ways to do this: create calm environment, quiet, clean, pre-medicate, minimal restraint, move people not the pet, keep owners in the exam room, avoid force