An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming
We evaluated a scheme for assessing shelter dog behaviour, which used 28 tests and rated responses from 0 (positive response) to 5 (fear, tonic immobility, or escape attempts). The assessment was evaluated for 236 dogs, and was repeated by a different assessor for 39 dogs approximately 80 days after...
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2010-01-01
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Series: | Veterinary Medicine International |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.4061/2010/523781 |
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doaj-5ced0e92d45d4101b017c4160ce5b4ba2020-11-24T23:08:04ZengHindawi LimitedVeterinary Medicine International2042-00482010-01-01201010.4061/2010/523781523781An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for RehomingA. H. Poulsen0A. T. Lisle1C. J. C. Phillips2Centre for Animal Welfare and Ethics, School of Veterinary Sciences, The University of Queensland, Queensland 4343, AustraliaSchool of Land, Crop and Food Sciences, Gatton Campus, The University of Queensland, Queensland 4343, AustraliaCentre for Animal Welfare and Ethics, School of Veterinary Sciences, The University of Queensland, Queensland 4343, AustraliaWe evaluated a scheme for assessing shelter dog behaviour, which used 28 tests and rated responses from 0 (positive response) to 5 (fear, tonic immobility, or escape attempts). The assessment was evaluated for 236 dogs, and was repeated by a different assessor for 39 dogs approximately 80 days after rehoming to determine relevance of individual test components. A new owner survey evaluated satisfaction with the dog. A total of 130 of 236 dogs passed (score ≤ 70), 24 scored 71–80 (referred for behavioural modification), and 82 (score > 80) failed. Scores were mainly unaffected by dog type and environmental variables, but decreased if dog faeces from a previous test was present in the arena during a test. Shelter tests only correlated with repeat tests if there was no direct contact with assessors. Adopters were satisfied with their dogs, despite reporting some behaviour problems. The shelter assessment was therefore robust against most outside influences but did not predict responses to people well.http://dx.doi.org/10.4061/2010/523781 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
A. H. Poulsen A. T. Lisle C. J. C. Phillips |
spellingShingle |
A. H. Poulsen A. T. Lisle C. J. C. Phillips An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming Veterinary Medicine International |
author_facet |
A. H. Poulsen A. T. Lisle C. J. C. Phillips |
author_sort |
A. H. Poulsen |
title |
An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming |
title_short |
An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming |
title_full |
An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming |
title_fullStr |
An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Evaluation of a Behaviour Assessment to Determine the Suitability of Shelter Dogs for Rehoming |
title_sort |
evaluation of a behaviour assessment to determine the suitability of shelter dogs for rehoming |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
Veterinary Medicine International |
issn |
2042-0048 |
publishDate |
2010-01-01 |
description |
We evaluated a scheme for assessing shelter dog behaviour, which used 28 tests and rated responses from 0 (positive response) to 5 (fear, tonic immobility, or escape attempts). The assessment was evaluated for 236 dogs, and was repeated by a different assessor for 39 dogs approximately 80 days after rehoming to determine relevance of individual test components. A new owner survey evaluated satisfaction with the dog. A total of 130 of 236 dogs passed (score ≤ 70), 24 scored 71–80 (referred for behavioural modification), and 82 (score > 80) failed. Scores were mainly unaffected by dog type and environmental variables, but decreased if dog faeces from a previous test was present in the arena during a test. Shelter tests only correlated with repeat tests if there was no direct contact with assessors. Adopters were satisfied with their dogs, despite reporting some behaviour problems. The shelter assessment was therefore robust against most outside influences but did not predict responses to people well. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.4061/2010/523781 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ahpoulsen anevaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming AT atlisle anevaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming AT cjcphillips anevaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming AT ahpoulsen evaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming AT atlisle evaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming AT cjcphillips evaluationofabehaviourassessmenttodeterminethesuitabilityofshelterdogsforrehoming |
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