ANIMAL WELFARE (Companion Animal Handling) Flashcards

1
Q

Distant exam:

A

-don’t approach the animals right away
-increases safety
-improves animal comfort
-decreases fear, anxiety, and stress
-allows time to build a relationship with the owner

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2
Q

Facial expression:

A

-look at their face, it tells you everything

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3
Q

Dog body language:

A

*eyes, ears, tail
Relaxed
-tail down
-ears up
-mouth open
Interested:
-wider eyes
-mouth is closed
-tail straight out

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4
Q

Thresholds and intensities:

A

-behavioural threshold
-emotional threshold

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5
Q

Very high arousal:

A

-reactivity
-threatening warnings (growl, snarl, lunge)
-escape movements

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6
Q

High arousal:

A

-displacement (multiple, clustering)
-conflict behaviours

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7
Q

Low arousal:

A

-normal behaviour

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8
Q

Ladder of aggression:

A

*not reliable to use, but helps to understand the progression
-if dog takes each step, only 0.2s between each step
-if intensity of stress/threat matters: STEPS CAN BE SKIPPED

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9
Q

Displacement behaviours:

A

-unconscious behaviour
-normal behaviours out of context
-because they are normal, we tend to miss them

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10
Q

Displacement behaviours questions:

A

-are they normal but out of place?
-are they repetitive?
-is there more than one?
-context repeatable?

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11
Q

Conflict behaviour:

A

-I am unsure
-I want it but I don’t want it

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12
Q

Examples of conflict behaviour:

A

-wants the cookie, but not the human (lip lick, slow motion)
-barking (stay away) and wagging tail (I want to interact)

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13
Q

Body language of fear in dogs:

A

-slight and major cowering
-more subtle signs of fear and anxiety

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14
Q

More subtle signs of fear and anxiety:

A

-liking lips
-panting
-brows furrowed, ears to side
-moving in slow motion
-acting sleeping or yawing
-hypervigilant
-suddenly wont eat
-moving away
-pacing

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15
Q

Feline later of aggression:

A

-understand the steps they go though
-they go through the steps much faster

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16
Q

Body language of feline anxiety:

A

-slight crouching
-major crouching

17
Q

Subtle signs of fear and anxiety: cats

A

-dilated eyes
-ears turned back, furrowed brow
-staring, focused on object
-hiding, looks half asleep
-laying on side, tail flicking
-hair raised
-walking with flat back, tail and head down
-ready to jump off perch
-suddenly grooming, excessive grooming

18
Q

Displacement behaviour in cats:

A

-less in cats
>lip licking
>grooming out of no where

19
Q

Set the stage

A

-comfortable environment
-handlers and positions to remain more calm and cooperative
>quite
>non-slippery flooring/tables

20
Q

Pheromones

A

-physiologic and behavioural effects on animals of the same species
-Dog Appeasing pheromone (Adaptil)
-Feline facial pheromone analogue (Feliway)

21
Q

Dog appeasing pheromone (Adaptil):

A

-reduces barking amplitude, restlessness, sniffing behaviour
-calmed, but not reduced struggling before venous catheterization
-stress reduction during vet visits

22
Q

Location preferences:

A

-large dog: prefer the floor
-small dogs: feel less threatened on the table
-cats: prefer to be up high or hide

23
Q

Principles of restraint:

A

-be organized
-wait until the pet is relaxed before starting
-encourage calm behaviour (provide distractions)
-minimal restraint (use food)
-towel wraps for cats

24
Q

Restraint:

A

-most prefer least amount necessary
-use your hands and body to control movement
-move deliberately and slowly
-maintain constant touch if possible
-adjust handling based on patient’s needs
*consistent touch

25
Q

If patient struggles for more than 3s (dogs), 1-2s (cats) or struggles repeatedly:

A

-fix your technique
-switch restraint position
-get assistance
-try chemical restraint
-ask: is it a must or a want?

26
Q

In hospital training:

A

-desensitization and counter conditioning
>send home a counter conditioning plan
-sedation: pre-visit medication