4.2 Article

Covid Cats and Pandemic Puppies: The Altered Realm of Veterinary Care for Companion Animals during a Global Pandemic

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ANIMAL WELFARE SCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 153-166

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10888705.2022.2038168

Keywords

Companion animals; COVID-19; veterinary clinic; registered veterinary technicians; workplace stress

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This article examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on companion animals and veterinary professionals, and presents the findings of a mixed methods research that sheds light on the new realities of labor and interspecies care work during the lockdown. These findings are important for veterinary professionals, researchers, companion animal guardians, and animal welfare advocates.
The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada and the US significantly impacted the myriad relationships that exist amongst human and non-human animals. This article highlights the tolls that the virus and lockdown measures took (and continue to take) on companion animals and the veterinary professionals who care for them. Veterinary medicine scrambled quickly to adapt to new parameters of care using pandemic protocols, radically transforming the amount and quality of care for companion animals, and the work lives of those who provide it. Changes in clinic protocols, patient admissions and discharges, deliveries, shipments, appointment scheduling and duration, and the availability of food, pharmaceuticals and medical equipment all impacted the lives of non-human animals, and the work lives of those providing veterinary care . The authors employed mixed methods research, combining ethnographic data with secondary source data analysis to illuminate the new realities of labor and interspecies care work in the lockdown-induced anthropause. The findings are relevant to veterinary professionals, researchers, companion animal guardians, animal welfare advocates, and possibly emergency management organizations in prepareding for future catastrophic events.

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