1st Edition

Veterinary Controversies and Ethical Dilemmas Provocative Reflections on Clinical Practice

    432 Pages 6 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    432 Pages 6 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    This book identifies increasing concerns with the veterinary profession and confronts them provocatively, with a view to stimulating positive change.  A central theme is the emergence of the profitable ‘fur baby’ which is being propagated through encouraged anthropomorphism, a limited evidence base, overdiagnosis, overtreatment, and practice corporatisation. Richly accompanied with thoughts on veterinary celebrity, the misrepresentation of veterinary 'success', research using client-owned animals, unregulated treatments and end-of-life decision-making, the book represents a small room full of large elephants.  With experienced contributors from around the world, each chapter combines personal story with evidence-based reflections.

    While many of the subjects presented will have undergone some degree of ethical analysis, the book itself does not intend to teach veterinary ethics; instead, its role is to identify key concerns with the profession’s current trajectory and to present them with candour, from the perspective of concerned veterinary professionals.

    Ideal for use within the veterinary curriculum to stimulate undergraduate thought and discussion, this book will also be a valuable reference for practitioners as the veterinary profession comes to terms with life in a post-truth era.

    PART I: INTRODUCTION

     

    Chapter 1 – Veterinary controversies and ethical dilemmas: an introduction
    Eddie Clutton                                                                 

     

    Chapter 2 – Veterinary killing: history and ethics                                                                                              
    Andrew Gardiner

    Chapter 3 – The law, animals, and veterinarians                                                                                               
    Peter Fordyce

    Chapter 4 – Sentient beings: our duty of care. Who are our patients?                                                                                              
    John Webster

    Chapter 5 – Let’s all march for (veterinary) science: veterinary science in a post truth society                                                                                             
    Tanya Stephens

     

    PART II: SOME ETHICAL CHALLENGES FACING THE VETERINARY PROFESSION

     

    Too much veterinary medicine

    Chapter 6 – Just because we can doesn’t mean we should                                                                                             
    Polly Taylor

    Chapter 7 – Overdiagnosis                                                                                             
    Brennen McKenzie

    Chapter 8 – Do you want bloods with that?                                                                                             
    Tanya Stephens

    Chapter 9 – Oncology and ethics                                                                                             
    Tanya Stephens

    Chapter 10 – Small animal overtreatment: intensive care                                                                                           
    Peter Fordyce

    Research on companion animals

    Chapter 11 – Innovation versus experiment: experiments on pets?                                                                                             
    Polly Taylor

    Chapter 12 – Veterinary ethical review – a multitude of questions                                                                                             
    Stephen Greenhalgh

    Chapter 13 – Can considering laboratory animal legislation improve animal welfare in innovative veterinary practice?                                                                                         
    Ngaire Dennison

    Evidence-free veterinary medicine

    Chapter 14 – Why believe in magic? The use of ineffective therapies has animal welfare and ethical implications                                                                                           
    Tanya Stephens

    Chapter 15 – Should complementary and alternative veterinary medicine be considered malpractice? An ethical-legal analysis                                                                                           
    Manuel Magalhães Sant’Ana and Alexandre Azevedo

    Chapter 16 – Pointless supplements and ‘therapeutic’ pet foods                                                                                       
    Andrea Tarr

    Exotic animal medicine

    Chapter 17 – Zoo vet dilemmas – a personal perspective                                                                                          
    Andrew Routh

    Chapter 18 – The value of mice                                                                                            
    Eddie Clutton and Amanda Novak

     

    PART III: WHY ARE THESE CONTROVERSIES ARISING? THROUGH CHANGES AT NUMEROUS LEVELS OF THE VETERINARY-CLIENT-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP

    The animal population

    Chapter 19 – Problems with pedigrees: righteous rage and the need for nuance                                                                                            
    Alison Skipper

    Chapter 20 – Ageing pets and physical rehabilitation                                                                                        
    Mary Ellen Goldberg, Sheilah Robertson, and Polly Taylor

    The veterinary profession

    Chapter 21 – Veterinary education and the changing profession                                                                                        
    Sarah Wolfensohn

    Chapter 22 – The art of veterinary science                                                                                        
    Kendal Shepherd

    Chapter 23 – Veterinary academia, specialization, and animal welfare                                                                                        
    Eddie Clutton

    Chapter 24 – What are general practitioners good for?                                                                                        
    Brennen McKenzie

    Chapter 25 – Do vets need to love animals?                                                                                        
    Kathy Murphy

    Chapter 26 – It is time to ditch the gold standard                                                                                       
    Tanya Stephens

    Chapter 27 – Informed consent – in whose interests?                                                                                     
    Carol Gray

    Chapter 28 – The death of veterinary euthanasia                                                                                      
    Eddie Clutton

    Chapter 29 – Moral stress, emotional labour and mental health in the veterinary profession                                                                                        
    Vanessa Ashall

    Veterinary practice

    Chapter 30 – The customer isn’t always right: why business ethics is not professional ethics                                                                                     
    Tanya Stephens

    Chapter 31 – Corporatisation: do shareholders care about animal welfare?                                                                             
    John Innes

    Chapter 32 – Costs of veterinary services as an animal welfare issue                                                                                 
    Nigel Taylor

    Veterinary clients

    Chapter 33 – Anthropomorphism in veterinary practice                                                                                     
    Eddie Clutton

    Chapter 34 – Going to extremes: high financial cost, overtreatment and palliative care                                                                                 
    Polly Taylor

    Chapter 35 – Give the dog a bone                                                                                     
    Tanya Stephens

    Vets in society

    Chapter 36 – Is the veterinary profession encouraging exploitation of horses in sport?                                                                                   
    Sue Dyson

    Chapter 37 – Vets speaking up for animal welfare                                                                                     
    Sean Wensley

    Chapter 38 – An approach to ethical conflicts in practice                                                                                  
    Brennen McKenzie

    Biography

    Tanya Stephens was born and raised in Somerset and then Derby before her family set sail for Australia when she was a teenager. She is a graduate of the University of Sydney in Veterinary Science and has a Masters in International Animal Welfare, Ethics and Law from the University of Edinburgh, is a Member of the Australian and New Zealand College of Veterinary Scientists in Animal Welfare and was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in 2020 for meritorious contribution to the profession. Tanya established her own small animal practice in Haberfield Sydney and very much enjoys practice. She is also a wildlife researcher with original research on galactosaemia in kangaroos. Her interests lie in professional ethics, animal welfare, research, evidence based medicine, wildlife, the environment and sustainable agriculture. She is a regular presenter and published author on these topics and is the editor of One Welfare in Practice: the Role of the Veterinarian. Tanya holds leadership positions in the Australian Veterinary Association and is the current President of the Conservation Biology Special Interest Group and Chair of the AVA’s Animal Welfare Trust, member of a number of Animal Ethics Committees, honorary consulting veterinarian for the Children’s Medical Research Institute, veterinary member of the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal, Chair of the NSW Kangaroo Management Advisory Panel and Chair of the NSW Greyhound Welfare Integrity Commission Animal Welfare Committee. She is a recipient of the Belle Bruce Reid Medal awarded by the University of Melbourne to Australia’s 100 most notable women veterinary science graduates. Tanya is married to Harry, an architect, who designed this book cover, and they have four children and nine grandchildren.

    Eddie Clutton graduated (BVSC [hons]) from the University of Liverpool in 1981before beginning post-graduate training in the Department of Anaesthesia, The Royal Liverpool Hospital.  He worked in the University of Virginia – Maryland, USA for 5 years as assistant professor in Veterinary Anesthesiology.  He gained the RCVS Diploma in Veterinary Anaesthesia in 1985. He became Head of Veterinary Anaesthesia in the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies (Edinburgh) 1990 – 2015.  He became a Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary Anaesthesia in 1996.  He was editor-in-chief of Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia (2000 – 2005).  He was President of the Association of Veterinary Anaesthetists (2005 – 2008).  He is a member of the Royal College of Anaesthetists, the Association of Veterinary Anaesthetists, the Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law Association, the Laboratory Animal Veterinary Association and the Laboratory Animal Science Association. His research interests include: pain management and depth of anaesthesia monitoring in pigs and sheep; and medical ethics.  He was awarded a Chair of Veterinary Anaesthesiology (University of Edinburgh) August 2007.  He was a co-founder of EthicsFirst (2016).  He was awarded the Morpheus Award in 2019 for exceptional contributions to Veterinary anaesthesia, analgesia and intensive care, and to the European College of Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia. He is currently the Clinical Director of the Wellcome Trust Critical Care Laboratory for Large Animals (Roslin Institute). He was awarded the Fellowship (RCVS) June 2019 for his meritorious contribution to knowledge. In 2024 he was awarded the British Veterinary Association's Dalrymple- Champneys Cup and Medal for the distinctive contributions he has made to the field of veterinary anaesthesia.

    Polly Taylor graduated as VetMB from Cambridge University in 1976 and worked in general practice before moving to the Cambridge University Veterinary School where she obtained the RCVS DVA. She became chief of anaesthesia at the Animal Health Trust in 1983 and gained her PhD (Cambridge University) in 1987 for her thesis in equine anaesthesia. In 1994 she became University Lecturer and subsequently Reader at the Cambridge University Veterinary School where she was responsible for the clinical anaesthetic service, teaching undergraduates and post graduates and for research in anaesthesia. She became a Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary Anaesthesia in 1995 and was founding President of the College. She has been honoured with a number of awards for her work in anaesthesia and analgesia. In 2024 she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Zurich for “contributions to veterinary anaesthesiology and analgesia research, education and animal welfare worldwide”. Since 2002 she has worked as an independent consultant in anaesthesia, with work ranging from clinical anaesthesia of numerous species and teaching to drug registration, as well as research, particularly in analgesia. She has published numerous papers on anaesthesia and analgesia in many species, particularly horses and cats. Since its inception in 2008 she has been a director of Topcat Metrology Ltd, developing and supplying bespoke nociceptive threshold testing systems for a wide range of animal species. She was a member of the UK Advisory Council for the Misuse of Drugs (2002-2010) and has continued to be an advocate for the veterinary profession in matters concerning drug legislation. Her most recent activity putting her head above the parapet is to join a growing group showing the profession that overtreatment of animals “just because we can” is often not in their best interests.

    Kathy Murphy graduated from the Royal Veterinary College, London, in 1999. After spending several years in mixed general practice she moved to the University of Oxford where she completed Certificates in Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, and Laboratory Animal Science, whilst working as a clinical laboratory animal vet. Remaining at the University of Oxford she was awarded a Wellcome Trust Fellowship for her PhD in behavioral neuroscience and went on to the position of Assistant Professor of Neuroscience and Anesthesiology at the Icahn School of Medicine, Friedman Brain Institute, in New York City. Returning to the University of Oxford in 2013 for the clinical academic position of Laboratory Animal Anaesthetist; and then to Newcastle University, UK, in 2016 for the position of Director of the Comparative Biology Centre. During this time she carried out a concurrent alternate track European College residency in Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, which provided the opportunity to return to companion animal work in a variety of settings, both first opinion and referral practice – private, academic, corporate and independent. She currently works as a consultant in change management, and holds non-exec board positions. She is founder and director of Barking Brains Ltd, a science communication platform; is co-founder of EthicsFirst; past Trustee and veterinary advisor for the Rottweiler Welfare Association and fills time on ethical review panels, working groups and with ad hoc reviewing, lecturing and MSc/PhD supervision.