Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle. / McIntosh, W. M.Alex; Schulz, Sarah; Dean, Wesley; Scott, Morgan H.; Barling, Kerry S.; Takei, Isao.

In: Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, Vol. 19, No. 1, 2009, p. 51-67.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

McIntosh, WMA, Schulz, S, Dean, W, Scott, MH, Barling, KS & Takei, I 2009, 'Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle', Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 51-67. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.976

APA

McIntosh, W. M. A., Schulz, S., Dean, W., Scott, M. H., Barling, K. S., & Takei, I. (2009). Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 19(1), 51-67. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.976

Vancouver

McIntosh WMA, Schulz S, Dean W, Scott MH, Barling KS, Takei I. Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology. 2009;19(1):51-67. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.976

Author

McIntosh, W. M.Alex ; Schulz, Sarah ; Dean, Wesley ; Scott, Morgan H. ; Barling, Kerry S. ; Takei, Isao. / Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle. In: Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology. 2009 ; Vol. 19, No. 1. pp. 51-67.

Bibtex

@article{49a0ab92b42740389bdbd1603fc33b60,
title = "Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle",
abstract = "This cross-sectional survey research study examined the role moral beliefs play in predicting behavioural beliefs and attitudes and the role that subjective norms play in predicting moral beliefs. Using a self-administered questionnaire, one hundred and three feedlot veterinarians completed measures of behavioural beliefs, referent others, perceived constraints and moral beliefs regarding recommendations to use antimicrobials in four situations (i.e. acutely sick cattle, chronically sick cattle, at-risk cattle and high-risk cattle). Regression analysis and F-tests indicate moral beliefs as contributing significant increases in R2 to models predicting behavioural beliefs regarding anti-microbial use in each situation. In addition, subjective norms contribute a significant increase in R2 in models predicting moral beliefs in each of the four situations. The results indicate the effects of moral beliefs on behavioural beliefs are somewhat contingent on the condition; that is the level of risk associated with treating cattle with antimicrobials, the level of risk of not doing so, and the effectiveness of the antimicrobial in situations such as acute illness or being at-risk of illness.",
keywords = "Antimicrobials, Feedlot cattle, Feedlot veterinarians, Moral beliefs",
author = "McIntosh, {W. M.Alex} and Sarah Schulz and Wesley Dean and Scott, {Morgan H.} and Barling, {Kerry S.} and Isao Takei",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1002/casp.976",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "51--67",
journal = "Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology",
issn = "1052-9284",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Feedlot veterinarians' moral and instrumental beliefs regarding antimicrobial use in feedlot cattle

AU - McIntosh, W. M.Alex

AU - Schulz, Sarah

AU - Dean, Wesley

AU - Scott, Morgan H.

AU - Barling, Kerry S.

AU - Takei, Isao

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - This cross-sectional survey research study examined the role moral beliefs play in predicting behavioural beliefs and attitudes and the role that subjective norms play in predicting moral beliefs. Using a self-administered questionnaire, one hundred and three feedlot veterinarians completed measures of behavioural beliefs, referent others, perceived constraints and moral beliefs regarding recommendations to use antimicrobials in four situations (i.e. acutely sick cattle, chronically sick cattle, at-risk cattle and high-risk cattle). Regression analysis and F-tests indicate moral beliefs as contributing significant increases in R2 to models predicting behavioural beliefs regarding anti-microbial use in each situation. In addition, subjective norms contribute a significant increase in R2 in models predicting moral beliefs in each of the four situations. The results indicate the effects of moral beliefs on behavioural beliefs are somewhat contingent on the condition; that is the level of risk associated with treating cattle with antimicrobials, the level of risk of not doing so, and the effectiveness of the antimicrobial in situations such as acute illness or being at-risk of illness.

AB - This cross-sectional survey research study examined the role moral beliefs play in predicting behavioural beliefs and attitudes and the role that subjective norms play in predicting moral beliefs. Using a self-administered questionnaire, one hundred and three feedlot veterinarians completed measures of behavioural beliefs, referent others, perceived constraints and moral beliefs regarding recommendations to use antimicrobials in four situations (i.e. acutely sick cattle, chronically sick cattle, at-risk cattle and high-risk cattle). Regression analysis and F-tests indicate moral beliefs as contributing significant increases in R2 to models predicting behavioural beliefs regarding anti-microbial use in each situation. In addition, subjective norms contribute a significant increase in R2 in models predicting moral beliefs in each of the four situations. The results indicate the effects of moral beliefs on behavioural beliefs are somewhat contingent on the condition; that is the level of risk associated with treating cattle with antimicrobials, the level of risk of not doing so, and the effectiveness of the antimicrobial in situations such as acute illness or being at-risk of illness.

KW - Antimicrobials

KW - Feedlot cattle

KW - Feedlot veterinarians

KW - Moral beliefs

U2 - 10.1002/casp.976

DO - 10.1002/casp.976

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:59749088936

VL - 19

SP - 51

EP - 67

JO - Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology

JF - Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology

SN - 1052-9284

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 255457577