Department of Veterinary Medicine, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA
Mini Review
End-of-Life Care and the Animal
Author(s): Annie Daniel*
As veterinary palliative care evolves over the next decade, I hope to see a strong emphasis on the individual patient maintained. So far, the
nascent field has focused primarily on the bereaved family and the burnt-out and compassion-fatigued veterinary team. I've attended professional
conferences where the content was heavily weighted toward dealing with depressed families, memorialising deceased animals, performing
euthanasia, and teaching veterinarians and nurse’s self-care skills, with few to no lectures on how to identify behavioural signs of distress or
better understand the emotional lives of animal patients. The literature on pet loss and bereavement is many times larger and more robust than
the literature on assessing quality of life... Read More»
DOI:
10.37421/2952-8097.2022.6.169
Journal of Animal Health and Behavioural Science received 38 citations as per Google Scholar report