Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers

<p>Animal-based measures (ABM) can be used effectively in the on-farm evaluation of broiler welfare in relation to laws, codes of practice, quality assurance schemes, management and also partly for ante-mortem inspection. Some ABM can also be taken post-mortem at the slaughterhouse. No...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: EFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2012-07-01
Series:EFSA Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/efsajournal/doc/2774.pdf
id doaj-6a790287d0534d1dbe3eca5ad718559f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6a790287d0534d1dbe3eca5ad718559f2021-05-02T02:06:43ZengWileyEFSA Journal1831-47322012-07-0110710.2903/j.efsa.2012.2774Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilersEFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare<p>Animal-based measures (ABM) can be used effectively in the on-farm evaluation of broiler welfare in relation to laws, codes of practice, quality assurance schemes, management and also partly for ante-mortem inspection. Some ABM can also be taken post-mortem at the slaughterhouse. Non-animal-based measures can be used when the association between them and the welfare outcome is strong and when they are more efficient than ABM as a means to safeguard welfare. They can also be useful predictors of welfare in broilers. The choice of animal-based measures will depend upon the specific objectives of the assessment. The full list is comparable to a ‘toolbox’, from which the appropriate set of measures can be selected. The Welfare Quality<sup>®</sup> protocol provides information on the majority of the welfare outcomes for the main factors identified in the EFSA Scientific Opinions but not those where time limitation prevents it. There is a lack of research on the use of ABM on-farm and in the slaughterhouse to assess pain, frustration, boredom and other negative or positive emotional states in the standard broiler. There are limited management options to prevent poor welfare when the flock is still in the house e.g. to improve the ventilation system. The same applies to negative consequences arising from genetic selection. There is a need for more systematic flock monitoring and surveillance programmes in the broiler industry. Visual inspection has a very high potential to improve animal welfare in broiler production when a range of appropriate ABM is used in the slaughterhouse. Benchmarking can be used to document welfare changes over time, including automatic monitoring and assessment systems. Attention should also be paid to initial and ongoing training of assessors in the field and in the abattoir to ensure valid and robust measurements.</p>http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/efsajournal/doc/2774.pdfBroiler welfarewelfare assessmentrisk assessmentwelfare outcome indicatorsslaughterhouse inspectionon-farm assessmentanimal-based measures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author EFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare
spellingShingle EFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare
Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
EFSA Journal
Broiler welfare
welfare assessment
risk assessment
welfare outcome indicators
slaughterhouse inspection
on-farm assessment
animal-based measures
author_facet EFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare
author_sort EFSA Panel on Animal Health and Welfare
title Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
title_short Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
title_full Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
title_fullStr Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
title_full_unstemmed Scientific Opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
title_sort scientific opinion on the use of animal-based measures to assess welfare of broilers
publisher Wiley
series EFSA Journal
issn 1831-4732
publishDate 2012-07-01
description <p>Animal-based measures (ABM) can be used effectively in the on-farm evaluation of broiler welfare in relation to laws, codes of practice, quality assurance schemes, management and also partly for ante-mortem inspection. Some ABM can also be taken post-mortem at the slaughterhouse. Non-animal-based measures can be used when the association between them and the welfare outcome is strong and when they are more efficient than ABM as a means to safeguard welfare. They can also be useful predictors of welfare in broilers. The choice of animal-based measures will depend upon the specific objectives of the assessment. The full list is comparable to a ‘toolbox’, from which the appropriate set of measures can be selected. The Welfare Quality<sup>®</sup> protocol provides information on the majority of the welfare outcomes for the main factors identified in the EFSA Scientific Opinions but not those where time limitation prevents it. There is a lack of research on the use of ABM on-farm and in the slaughterhouse to assess pain, frustration, boredom and other negative or positive emotional states in the standard broiler. There are limited management options to prevent poor welfare when the flock is still in the house e.g. to improve the ventilation system. The same applies to negative consequences arising from genetic selection. There is a need for more systematic flock monitoring and surveillance programmes in the broiler industry. Visual inspection has a very high potential to improve animal welfare in broiler production when a range of appropriate ABM is used in the slaughterhouse. Benchmarking can be used to document welfare changes over time, including automatic monitoring and assessment systems. Attention should also be paid to initial and ongoing training of assessors in the field and in the abattoir to ensure valid and robust measurements.</p>
topic Broiler welfare
welfare assessment
risk assessment
welfare outcome indicators
slaughterhouse inspection
on-farm assessment
animal-based measures
url http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/efsajournal/doc/2774.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT efsapanelonanimalhealthandwelfare scientificopinionontheuseofanimalbasedmeasurestoassesswelfareofbroilers
_version_ 1721496281698795520