Παρασκευή 19 Απριλίου 2024

Animal Welfare: from Five Freedoms to Five Domains

 

In 1994, Professor David Mellor and Dr. Cam Reid (New Zealand) proposed a new model to think about animal welfare and its assessment. The Five Domains Model of Animal Welfare was most recently updated in 2020 and is increasingly used globally when considering the lived experience of animals in humans’ care.

This approach allows for consideration of both negative and positive experiences that arise from physical and functional factors, which affect the overall mental state and welfare of the individual animal. Over the past 20 years this paradigm has been widely adopted as a tool for assessing the welfare impacts of research procedures, pest animal control methods, and other interventions in animals’ lives.

The Five Domains explores the mental state of an animal in detail and acknowledges that for every physical aspect that is affected, there may be an accompanying emotion or subjective experience that may also affect welfare. This is useful in terms of reinforcing the message that mental experiences are equally important as physical vitality for animals to thrive.

One of the most important strengths of the Five Domains is the clarity it provides that merely minimising or resolving negative physical or mental states does not necessarily result in positive welfare, but may only provide, at best, a neutral state. To have a good life, one where positive welfare experiences are enjoyed, animals need more than this.

To help ensure animals have a ‘a good life’ they must have the opportunity to have positive experiences, such as anticipation, meaningful social connection, satisfaction, and satiation. To enable this, those responsible for the care of animals need to provide them with opportunities for interactions (with their environment, people, and other animals) that not only allow but encourage animals to make choices and express behaviours that are rewarding to them. This shift in understanding is the basis for the Five Domains model incorporating positive welfare states. You can read about this in detail here*.

Thus, the Five Domains provides a comprehensive and structured way of considering the wellbeing of an individual or group of animals in a particular situation, with a strong focus on positive mental experiences. The Five Domains also allows us to extend our thinking beyond the historical Five Freedoms of animal welfare to place even greater emphasis on encouraging positive experiences and recognising the emotional needs of individual animals, in addition to minimising negative experiences. 

Sourcehttps://kb.rspca.org.au/knowledge-base/what-are-the-five-domains-of-animal-welfare/

*https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/6/3/21 


More 

FOUR PAWS has been using the Five Domains Model as a tool for guiding animal welfare assessments.  

Five Domains vs. Five Freedoms of Animal Welfare 

Article: The 5 Domains of Animal Welfare: https://theanimalwelfarestation.wordpress.com/2021/08/21/article-the-5-domains-of-animal-welfare/ (with info from Massey University Animal Welfare Science and Bioethics Centre)



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