President's message
Welfare
A leader has all the qualities of a child - an insatiable curiosity for learning, a boundless energy
to put the learning into practice, and an ability to adapt to new behaviors very quickly.
-- Captain Michael McKean, former head of leadership training
for the US Army, quoted by Jack Kahl in Leading From the Heart
What does welfare mean to you? I have been asking members this
question for several months. The range of
responses has varied from a shrug of the shoulders
to well-verbalized answers. Dr Randy Bush's big-picture
answer was "any aspect of well-being that the caretaker knows to do
but does not do." Before being too hard on a "shrug of the
shoulders" answer, note that the definition of welfare is very
complex, involving more than housing sows in
gestation crates, transportation issues, and processing baby piglets. It represents a
comparison of people's values, knowledge, and facts. In other words,
animal welfare is a concept.
In 1991, Broom1 stated, "Welfare refers
to the state of an individual in relation to its environment." Swine producers and
their veterinarians have focused on health and production as characteristics of welfare.
These are easy to measure, and historically, there
has been a good correlation between health, production, and welfare. A unit not
producing well may have both a health problem and a welfare problem, ie, the animals
are under some kind of "stress." For
example, several years ago, a client had a concern about high young-sow mortality.
Investigation revealed extreme early weaning and underweight animals. The owner's
business plan was "pushing" the animals too
hard. The changes in animal agriculture in the past decade may be pushing biology
and husbandry practices farther apart. If so, we need better welfare indicators. The
primary focus for the anti-agricultural activists
is interpretation of animal behavior. However, as animal perceptions are
different from ours, this approach is inadequate. The
accepted indicators of animal welfare
include performance, health, behavior, and physiology. Taking a stand on just one indicator
is an injustice to the well-being of animals under the care of producers.
According to Dr Jeffery Rushen,2 the
literature is full of successful attempts to
assess single issues of animal welfare. Assessing the overall effect of housing on animal
welfare is a vastly more complicated
procedure.2 Dr Rushen supports development of
specific welfare indicators. Veterinarians and researchers are working to understand
how animals relate to their environments, health issues, and management levels.
The National Pork Board's Swine Welfare Fact Sheet, March, 2002, takes a stand
on defining responsible animal care through applying scientifically sound
guidelines, with the goal of illustrating that
proper animal care relies on interaction of caretaker skills, housing environment, and
responses of the animals. Producers must balance economic survival and ethical
incentives to understand what is best for their animals.
Consumers have sent a clear message of concern on methods of animal
production. Effects on agriculture derive from
what consumers are saying and how they are spending their disposable incomes.
Veterinarians need to communicate their awareness of welfare issues in animal
agriculture to corporate and community leaders.
The place for AASV members to make an impact is on the farm, doing what we
do best. The leader's "insatiable curiosity
for learning" should hold true for
veterinarians, leading to a commitment of a lifetime
of learning. Do you remember Dr Scott Dee's challenge to each of us during his
2004 Howard Dunne lecture on lifelong learning? Veterinarians must identify welfare
problems and become part of the solutions as
quickly as feasible. The Swine Welfare Assurance
Program (SWAP) is a useful tool for practitioners. After enrolling my first
herd, I realized that the process was not taken
lightly by the farm's staff.
As science and technology advance, we must expect the standards for husbandry
to evolve. The best way for veterinarians to capture the essence of leadership is to
be involved: start by implementing welfare into your farm visits. Develop strategies
to correct identified welfare problems and then develop programs to prevent
their recurrence. Enroll swine units into the SWAP program. Animal welfare can
easily become an emotional issue. Decisions must be based on sound and current
science. The landscape of modern production
is dynamic and must remain flexible as it adopts new standards necessary to
enhance and not impair welfare.
I am confident that this organization can and will impact this important issue. We
all are leaders in our profession and must lead "with boundless energy" to address
welfare issues.
By the time this issue arrives at your homes, we will be headed into the holiday
season. My most sincere and best wishes to each of you in your homes, practices,
businesses, and in your advancement as professionals.
References
1. Broom DM. Animal welfare: Concepts and measurements.
J Anim Sci. 1991;69:4167-4175. 2. Rushen J. Changing concepts of farm animal welfare: bridging the gap between applied and
basic research. Appl Anim Behav Sci. 2003;81:199-214.
--Tom Gillespie
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