veterinary ethics
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Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 3010
Author(s):  
Anne Quain ◽  
Michael P. Ward ◽  
Siobhan Mullan

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.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 3744-3747
Author(s):  
Jenypher Torquato Assunção ◽  
Elza Maria Galvão Ciffoni Arns
Keyword(s):  

Este artigo mostra um pouco da trajetória da clonagem no mundo abordando a ideia, os objetivos e alguns aspectos dos bastidores que, em regra, não são conhecidos. Assim, após revisar tais bastidores e os resultados práticos, convida-se o leitor a algumas reflexões sob o ponto de vista ético e moral da função do Médico Veterinário. Por fim, procura-se contribuir com a comunidade científica no sentido de conciliar os interesses do avanço científico e tecnológico sem retroceder ao antropocentrismo.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (7) ◽  
pp. 24-26
Author(s):  
Anne Quain
Keyword(s):  

Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 909
Author(s):  
Bogdan Feliks Kania ◽  
Danuta Wrońska ◽  
Urszula Bracha

Relief from suffering is the guiding principle of medical and veterinary ethics. Medical care for animals should be carried out to meet all welfare conditions. The need for pain management is demonstrated by recent monographs devoting attention to this urgent ethical need. Little data, however, are available on the prevention and attenuation of pain in sheep. After administration of narcotic analgesics used for severe visceral pain, sheep react with a state of excitement. Therefore, it was decided to experimentally investigate the usefulness of potential non-narcotic drugs to relieve pain in sheep with intestinal colic caused by 10 min of mechanical distension of their duodenal and/or descending colonic wall. The results indicate the potential usefulness of VGCCIs (diltiazem, nifedipine, verapamil), cholecystokinin receptor antagonists (PD, proglumide), and metabotropic glutaminergic receptor antagonists (mGluRAs), such as L-AP3, DL-AP3. As a premedication, these substances prevented the occurrence of symptoms of acute intestinal pain including atony of reticulo-rumen, tachycardia, hyperventilation, moaning, gnashing of teeth, hypercortisolemia, and catecholaminemia; hence, these substances are considered potential agents in the treatment of sheep visceral pain.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1033-1033
Author(s):  
Henk ten Have ◽  
Maria do Céu Patrão Neves
Keyword(s):  

Animals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 654
Author(s):  
Andreia De Paula Vieira ◽  
Raymond Anthony

What should leading discourses and innovation regarding animal welfare look like for the veterinary profession in the 2020s? This essay considers four main challenges into which veterinarians are increasingly being drawn, as they respond to increasing public expectation for them to be scientific and moral authorities in animal welfare in addition to their traditional role as trusted health experts. They include: (1) to go beyond traditional conceptions of health by adopting a holistic view that also considers animal welfare, not only disease treatment; (2) to reimagine their professional duties when it comes to disease prevention at the intersection of animal-human-ecosystem health; (3) to develop core competencies/proficiency in animal welfare science and ethics in order to navigate discourses concerning competing priorities and socio-political ideologies and to provide professional leadership in animal welfare; (4) to provide feedback on novel networked devices, monitoring technologies and automated animal welfare solutions and their impact on animals’ welfare. To competently navigate the intricacies of the socio-political and connected world as trusted authorities and conduits for innovation in and through animal welfare, veterinarians and veterinary students are encouraged to: (a) develop core competencies in veterinary ethics, animal welfare science and deliberative capacities that are well-informed by current multidisciplinary frameworks, such as One Health; (b) engage interested parties in more effective collaboration and ethical decision-making in order to address animal welfare related concerns within their immediate sphere of influence (e.g., in a given community); and (c) participate in the process of engineering and technological design that incorporates animals’ welfare data (such as their preferences) for real-time animal monitoring through adding animal scientific and values-aware evidence in information technology systems. In order to tackle these challenges, four pillars are suggested to help guide veterinarians and the veterinary profession. They are: Collaboration, Critical Engagement, Centeredness on Research, and Continuous Self-Critique.


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