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Career Preferences and Opinions on Animal Welfare and Ethics: A Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand.
J Vet Med Educ. Fall 2016; 43(3):310-20.JV

Abstract

Historically, the veterinary profession has understood animal welfare primarily in terms of animal health and productivity, with less recognition of animals' feelings and mental state. Veterinary students' career preferences and attitudes to animal welfare have been the focus of several international studies. As part of a survey in Australia and New Zealand, this study reports on whether veterinary students prioritize animal welfare topics or professional conduct on the first day of practice and examines links between students' career preferences and their institution, gender, and year of study. The questionnaire was designed to explore the importance that students assign to topics in animal welfare and ethics. Of the 3,320 students invited to participate in the online survey, a total of 851 students participated, representing a response rate of 25.5%. Students' preferences increased for companion-animal practice and decreased for production-animal practice as they progressed through their studies. Females ranked the importance of animal welfare topics higher than males, but the perceived importance declined for both genders in their senior years. In line with previous studies, this report highlighted two concerns: (1) the importance assigned to animal welfare declined as students progressed through their studies, and (2) males placed less importance overall on animal welfare than females. Given that veterinarians have a strong social influence on animal issues, there is an opportunity, through enhanced education in animal welfare, to improve student concern for animal welfare and in turn improve animal care and policy making by future veterinarians.

Authors

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Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27153506

Citation

Cornish, Amelia R., et al. "Career Preferences and Opinions On Animal Welfare and Ethics: a Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand." Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, vol. 43, no. 3, 2016, pp. 310-20.
Cornish AR, Caspar GL, Collins T, et al. Career Preferences and Opinions on Animal Welfare and Ethics: A Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand. J Vet Med Educ. 2016;43(3):310-20.
Cornish, A. R., Caspar, G. L., Collins, T., Degeling, C., Fawcett, A., Fisher, A. D., Freire, R., Hazel, S. J., Hood, J., Johnson, A. J., Lloyd, J., Phillips, C. J., Stafford, K., Tzioumis, V., & McGreevy, P. D. (2016). Career Preferences and Opinions on Animal Welfare and Ethics: A Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, 43(3), 310-20. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.0615-091R2
Cornish AR, et al. Career Preferences and Opinions On Animal Welfare and Ethics: a Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand. J Vet Med Educ. Fall 2016;43(3):310-20. PubMed PMID: 27153506.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Career Preferences and Opinions on Animal Welfare and Ethics: A Survey of Veterinary Students in Australia and New Zealand. AU - Cornish,Amelia R, AU - Caspar,Georgina L, AU - Collins,Teresa, AU - Degeling,Christopher, AU - Fawcett,Anne, AU - Fisher,Andrew D, AU - Freire,Rafael, AU - Hazel,Susan J, AU - Hood,Jennifer, AU - Johnson,A Jane, AU - Lloyd,Janice, AU - Phillips,Clive J C, AU - Stafford,Kevin, AU - Tzioumis,Vicky, AU - McGreevy,Paul D, Y1 - 2016/05/06/ PY - 2016/5/7/entrez PY - 2016/5/7/pubmed PY - 2017/1/14/medline KW - animal welfare KW - career preferences KW - curriculum KW - ethics KW - veterinary science SP - 310 EP - 20 JF - Journal of veterinary medical education JO - J Vet Med Educ VL - 43 IS - 3 N2 - Historically, the veterinary profession has understood animal welfare primarily in terms of animal health and productivity, with less recognition of animals' feelings and mental state. Veterinary students' career preferences and attitudes to animal welfare have been the focus of several international studies. As part of a survey in Australia and New Zealand, this study reports on whether veterinary students prioritize animal welfare topics or professional conduct on the first day of practice and examines links between students' career preferences and their institution, gender, and year of study. The questionnaire was designed to explore the importance that students assign to topics in animal welfare and ethics. Of the 3,320 students invited to participate in the online survey, a total of 851 students participated, representing a response rate of 25.5%. Students' preferences increased for companion-animal practice and decreased for production-animal practice as they progressed through their studies. Females ranked the importance of animal welfare topics higher than males, but the perceived importance declined for both genders in their senior years. In line with previous studies, this report highlighted two concerns: (1) the importance assigned to animal welfare declined as students progressed through their studies, and (2) males placed less importance overall on animal welfare than females. Given that veterinarians have a strong social influence on animal issues, there is an opportunity, through enhanced education in animal welfare, to improve student concern for animal welfare and in turn improve animal care and policy making by future veterinarians. SN - 0748-321X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27153506/Career_Preferences_and_Opinions_on_Animal_Welfare_and_Ethics:_A_Survey_of_Veterinary_Students_in_Australia_and_New_Zealand_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -