Tuesday, 18 September 2018

Delphi Workshop in Edinburgh


Delphi Workshop

At the beginning of September, we held our Delphi study workshop in Edinburgh. This was a very exciting milestone for us as it was the final step of the project, and the first time that we had any of our animal welfare experts all together in one place.

Prior to the workshop, we recruited almost 150 experts within 10 different species groups (cats, dogs, horses, rabbits, exotics, wildlife, cattle, pigs, sheep/goats, and poultry). Our animal welfare experts were a mixture of researchers, veterinarians, charity sector, industry, and government/policy. We asked all of them to complete two online surveys with the intention of ranking extensive animal welfare lists according to three different criteria: severity, duration, and prevalence. We then invited a sub-section of our experts, 20 in total, to come to Edinburgh for the workshop.

The purpose of the workshop was to ask our experts to work together during 2 days of activities and discussions to try and come up with a final list of priority welfare issues for each species, as well as an overall list of priority welfare issues for managed animals in the UK. No mean feat!

Despite the incredibly difficult nature of the task, we were very pleased with how well all of our experts worked together, and the interesting discussions that arose along the way. Remarkably, we were able to reach consensus on the final lists for all 10 groups. The final results of the workshop, and study as a whole, will be presented to our project funders, the Animal Welfare Foundation, by the end of November, and will also be published in several peer-reviewed journals. We will be sure to share these links with everyone when they become publicly available.

Thanks again to all of our fantastic experts.

Fiona C Rioja-Lang


Monday, 3 September 2018

Camels in Canada


Camels in Canada

I was delighted to be supported by JMICAWE to attend the 2018 Congress of the International Society for Applied Ethology (ISAE) in Prince Edward Island on the east coast of Canada. Its organisation was led by Professor Michael Cockram (previously of Edinburgh Vet School) at the University of PEI, on the outskirts of Charlottetown. Campus, town and indeed the whole island are pretty, and the lovely weather while we were there made the whole event – conference, side events and tours – a thoroughly enjoyable occasion.

That was helped by the famous friendliness of ISAE, and I have been glad to play some small part in that as a member of Council, including at the Council meeting (my last, as my term has now finished), at the AGM, and wherever else appropriate, such as during the traditionally enthusiastic dancing after the congress banquet. The conference’s scientific programme was also consistently high in quality, and I played my part in conferring, too. Indeed, I was doubtless in the category identified by our President Bas Rodenburg in his opening remarks as People who Frequently Ask Questions. His point was to encourage others to participate as well, and that was successfully achieved. An innovation of recent years has been ‘Eating with Ethologists,’ which arranges for students to share lunch tables with senior scientists of their choice. I greatly enjoyed this, and the students I met then and at other times were also enthusiastic about the opportunities for communication, both scientific and personal. I was glad throughout the meeting to represent Edinburgh and our work on welfare education for vets and others.

Finally, I gave the closing talk of the congress, with the title ‘On the ubiquity and utility of camels.’ This was a light-hearted look at the striking frequency with which animals appear in our everyday idioms: for example, ‘the straw that breaks the camel’s back.’ Yet this also reminds us of the importance of animals in our cultures, round the world and through the ages, and of understanding their behaviour and protecting their welfare for both their benefit and ours.

Mike Appleby





Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Visitors from India & Sri Lanka




Earlier this month, two representatives from KVASU, Kerala and one from the University of Peradeniya, Kandy spent a fortnight in Edinburgh discussing the evolving VN training.  They spent the first week in lectures and the clinical skills lab, and the next 5 days shadowing clinics in the Hospital for Small Animals, and also the Equine and Farm units.  The feedback from our visitors was hugely positive and there will be a follow-up visit to Sri Lanka and India in the Autumn



Tuesday, 15 May 2018

Introducing Louise Buckley to the JMICAWE team

A new face joins the Clinical Animal Behaviour MSc team

Our online MSc programme Clinical Animal Behaviour has proved so popular with students from across the world that it has been necessary to appoint a full time programme coordinator to assist Dr Amy Miele.

Meet Dr Louise Buckley, the newest recruit to our team here at JMICAWE.

 “Hello everyone! I was delighted to be offered this job as the programme focuses on many of my interests, and this means that I am in contact every day with students and staff from all over the world who also share my enthusiasm for animal behaviour and welfare.

Accepting this job was something of an academic home-coming for me as I started out here as a postgraduate student on the Applied Animal Behaviour and Welfare MSc programme back in the mid-2000s. I enjoyed myself so much that I then stayed to undertake a PhD in poultry welfare, focusing on broiler breeder hunger and diet preferences. The quest for an academic job then took me back South of the border, where I joined another university and lectured in veterinary nursing and animal behaviour/welfare topics for seven years.

However, my background is more eclectic than that - I am also a registered veterinary nurse who has worked in clinical practice for 20 years, often alongside my academic studies and teaching commitments. I can often be found at the weekend working at a busy veterinary emergency clinic and supporting clients and their pets through often difficult and traumatic events. I am also heavily involved in promoting evidence-based veterinary medicine and professional development of veterinary professionals through my activities with a number of veterinary organisations, and this is a passion I hope to extend further through my involvement once again with the CAB programme and the veterinary school.”

We welcome Louise back to Edinburgh and to the JMICAWE team.




Friday, 11 May 2018

A Day in the Life of a Veterinary Nurse


This month is Vet Nursing Awareness Month, and we asked our two VNs, Hayley Walters MBE and Jess Davies, to put an article together to explain their vital role in the care and treatment of their patients.


What does the veterinary nurse actually do?!

Our day begins with making sure that all the inpatients have everything they need. Medication, food, water, access to toileting and a clean comfy bed are the basics. But staying in an, albeit caring, but unfamiliar environment can be very upsetting for many animals and so we try to not just focus on their physical needs but also their psychological. For instance, making sure that the food they have is actually what they like to eat and not just any old food! Cats usually appreciate a box to hide in to make them feel secure and dogs often enjoy a comforting cuddle session to ease their anxiety from being away from their owner. Vet nurses are trained in understanding animal behaviour and assessing pain which allows us to highlight our concerns for a patient.  If we have any particular worries, we can discuss them with the vet in charge and make sure they are attended to quickly.

Veterinary nurses are more highly trained than many people think. We have to train for up to 4 years either in college or university, complete hundreds of hours of practical work within approved training centres, be signed off as competent in many different skills, complete assignments, and pass written and practical exams before we can qualify and go on the national register of veterinary nurses. This means we are qualified to do a plethora of jobs from taking blood, bandaging, cannula placing, and X-raying to anaesthetic monitoring, consultations, physiotherapy, and minor surgery. Vets rely very heavily on veterinary nurses to help them and the relationship is certainly symbiotic!

No two days are the same. We might be teaching an owner how to inject their diabetic cat with insulin one moment and holding a dear old dog for euthanasia the next. We might be resuscitating puppies born by caesarean one day and emptying anal glands the next! The hours can be long and sometimes it can be difficult emotionally, but those things are temporary and the good times always outweigh the sad. Knowing we are doing my best to improve the lives of animals is the most rewarding job in the world and if we had to choose my career again, we would both choose veterinary nursing in a heartbeat.




Tuesday, 8 May 2018

Dick Vet student wins 2018 RABDF Farm Health Management Award


Many congratulations to Penny Stewart, who has been announced the winner of 2018 RABDF Farm Health Management Award.  This is a fantastic achievement by one of our final student students (and is the second year of Dick Vet success!)

In the Spring Penny took part in a UK-wide competition to produce a 15000-word essay on the subject of the DEFRA/Industry Animal Health and Welfare Strategy.  This Government Strategy encompasses the health and welfare of farmed livestock, companion and other animals, aquaculture, and game animals. The Strategy is also concerned with wildlife where our actions affect their health or welfare, or where there is a risk of wildlife transmitting disease to other animals or humans.

Penny demonstrated her knowledge of the costs of disease and the financial impact of disease on business performance; her knowledge of the impact of good nutrition on the health and welfare of farm animals, the likely impact on the quality of meat and milk being produced for human consumption; and on the importance of collaboration between farm staff and veterinary and other advisers in formulating health management plans, alongside many other important issues.


Monday, 30 April 2018

Bahrain Pet Expo


Donata Baars, an animal care professional working in Bahrain, writes:-


Bahrain is a small island country in the Middle East, attached to Saudi Arabia by a causeway. It is a thriving country that has grown immensely in the last 40 years on all fronts of its economy. The only thing that seems to be falling behind is the welfare of the many animals that Bahrain has. Indigenous, exotic, wild, owned and stray. But there is definitely progress; Bahrain is working hard on improving its animal welfare!

On Friday the 13th April, Bahrain held its very first PetExpo! It was the first time ever that an event was organized that was all about the welfare of animals in general and stray dogs in particular. On the main stage, important issues were discussed. There was the first time showing of the movie about Baloo, a rescue dog that turned into a therapy dog for autistic children. The vet that works very closely with the BSPCA (Bahrain Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) talked about how to administer first aid to your pet when a veterinarian is not directly available.

Last but not least a discussion was held between animal welfare advocates about the situation of the stray dogs in Bahrain; how to reduce the stray dog population humanely, how to respond to a stray dog approaching you, the importance of spaying and neutering your pets, how to achieve a better human-dog interaction and much, much, more. As an animal care professional, I was invited to speak and represent a more scientific approach to stray dog management. With support from the JMICAWE team including Dr. Heather Bacon and VN Hayley Walters I was presenting an evidence-based approach to managing a stray dog population and the need for an on-going Catch-Neuter-Return programme. Heather and Hayley's knowledge and input was invaluable to having a meaningful discussion at the event. As a result a full feature article will be printed in next month’s Salaam Bahrain magazine!

Of course there were games, food sales and a shopping bazaar but they were also there to entice people to come and thus learn more about the welfare of animals. Not only were pet shops represented but also veterinary clinics and the local rescue groups that do so much in Bahrain for the welfare of the stray dogs.

Donata Baars



Thursday, 26 April 2018

Welcome back, Hayley!

It's  - and it marks the return to work after maternity leave for our Vet Nurse, Hayley Walters. Welcome back, Hayley!



Hayley's son & dog

Friday, 20 April 2018

Understanding the mind of the horse - Dr Helen Spence


Understanding the mind of the horse, with Dr Helen Spence

Ellie Girgis writes:

On the 21st February 2018, students and staff of the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies gathered at Easter Bush Campus to hear Dr Helen Spence (an academic, and working Equine Behaviour and Training Consultant) explain her approach to understanding the mind of the horse.

Dr Spence explained the various emotional drivers and the underlying physiological processes which result in the outward displays of specific behaviours and expressions in our horses. Dr Spence impressed the importance of understanding these processes for both compassionate and effective handling and training. 

               Ellie Girgis (on left) with Dr Helen Spence


In association with the R(D)SVS Horse Society, with whom they jointly hosted Dr Spence, the Dick Vet Animal Behaviour Society expresses their sincere thanks to Jeanne Marchig International Centre for Animal Welfare Education for their generous sponsorship, without which this event would not have been possible!



Wednesday, 18 April 2018

Dick Vet Behaviour & Nutrition Conference


Dick Vet Behaviour & Nutrition Conference

On Saturday 24th February, the Dick Vet Animal Behaviour Society and RDSVS Nutrition Society hosted their second joint Behaviour and Nutrition Conference. It was an excellent day, with 114 attendees consisting of students and staff from both the Dick Vet and Glasgow Vet School.

The day started early with breakfast before kicking off a full day of lectures on behaviour and nutrition topics.  Behaviour talks included:-
  • Training for Common Behaviour Problems with Dogs Trust Senior Behaviour and Training Adviser Alasdair Bunyan;
  • Aggression in Farm Species with R(D)SVS’ own Paul Wood; and 
  • How to Run a Behaviour Consult with University of Lincoln’s veterinary behaviourist Kevin McPeake.
Kevin McPeake


Nutrition talks covered:-
  • Dispelling Nutrition Myths with Royal Canin’s Hannah Poile;
  • The Power of Innovative Nutrition in Clinical Practice with Dick Vet graduate Emma Henton from Hill’s Pet Nutrition; and
  • Nutrition for Wildlife with Jess Crabtree from the Hessilhead Wildlife Rescue.

The day concluded with a wine and cheese reception which gave the delegates time to relax and chat with each other and with the guest speakers. Feedback was overwhelmingly positive and clearly showed the desire for more behaviour and nutrition teaching for vet students!


Tuesday, 17 April 2018

Shuchorita Epik wins runner-up in BVBA Veterinary Student Award



Shuchorita Epik, an undergraduate student at R(D)SVS with a keen interest in animal behaviour, was recently awarded the runner-up prize for the BVBA Veterinary Student Award.

She wrote this piece about her experience collecting the award in Birmingham on 4th April.

-" Attending the BVBA Study Day last week was a rewarding and very humbling experience for me, 
and I’m incredibly grateful to Dr. Amy Miele and everyone at the BVBA for such a valuable opportunity.

The process of writing the essay for this award made me reflect upon how much I have been taught in the last few years to allow me to carry my previous experience in animal behaviour into a future career as a veterinary clinician, something which I had been concerned about upon making the decision to shift fields.

I felt inspired hearing so many accomplished speakers discuss behaviour in its absolutely relevant context within the realm of animal medicine—in an age where animal welfare and ethics are still met with such controversy, it was incredibly uplifting to sit in a room full of such dedicated professionals. 

This very engaging conference day has left me with a great motivational boost to continue pursuing a post-graduation career in which behavioural considerations can be at the forefront of all of my clinical endeavors".


Many congratulations to Shochorita on her success!

Monday, 16 April 2018

Hayley Walters at BSAVA Congress 2018


JMICAWE vet nurse Hayley Walters recently spoke at BSAVA Congress in Birmingham. This is one of the biggest events on the veterinary calendar and is attended by vets and nurses from all over the world. Hayley gave two lectures: one on her experiences and challenges whilst working in developing nations; and the other on what to do if your patient’s welfare is compromised and your ethics are challenged. 

Her lectures were well received with many nurses coming up to speak to her afterwards. 

Hayley said, “It was such an honour to be able to speak at such a well respected event and I hope the vets and nurses at my lectures took away some really important information about how to improve their patient’s time in the clinic and what to expect when working in developing nations”. 


Hayley, along with JMICAWE's Veterinary Outreach Manager Heather Bacon, has been booked to speak again next year.

Thursday, 29 March 2018

Introducing Jess Martin




A second Jess joined our team at the end of last year, not to be confused with Jess Davies, our Vet Nurse covering Hayley Walters' maternity leave.  Allow Dr Jess Martin to introduce herself...

"I am a Lecturer at the R(D)SVS, University of Edinburgh and a Clinical Research Associate of the Roslin Institute. I have a long standing research interest in animal consciousness and pain, especially relating this to commercial pig and poultry production. My work in this area has spanned both physiological and behavioural welfare impacts of intensive livestock systems to on-farm despatching methods, as well as full scale animal slaughter. I also have a strong investment in AgriTech innovation to enhance animal welfare as well as production for livestock species. I have worked on a wide range of research projects related to animal pain, welfare assessment, behaviour, animal ethics, animal slaughter and on-farm killing, and animal transport. Alongside my research I teach and provide expert support in experimental design and data analysis for staff and students at R(D)SVS. I am currently the Animal Welfare Research Network Champion for the University of Edinburgh.

My current work is evaluating the welfare impact of a novel stunning technique (Low Atmospheric Pressure stunning) for commercial pigs, to hopefully identify a more humane alternative to CO2 stunning in pigs. This project is being funded by Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) and the Humane Slaughter Association (HSA) and is in collaboration with University of Glasgow and SRUC."





Thursday, 15 March 2018

Hayley Walters MBE

The whole team sends its congratulations to Hayley Walters, our JMICAWE Vet Nurse, who was at Buckingham Palace earlier today to collect her MBE from HRH the Prince of Wales


Well-deserved recognition for the work Hayley does to improve animal welfare worldwide.