How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies. / Thuesen, Ida Sofie; Agerholm, Jørgen Steen; Mejer, Helena; Nielsen, Søren Saxmose; Sandøe, Peter.

In: Animals, Vol. 12, 662, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Thuesen, IS, Agerholm, JS, Mejer, H, Nielsen, SS & Sandøe, P 2022, 'How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies', Animals, vol. 12, 662. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050662

APA

Thuesen, I. S., Agerholm, J. S., Mejer, H., Nielsen, S. S., & Sandøe, P. (2022). How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies. Animals, 12, [662]. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050662

Vancouver

Thuesen IS, Agerholm JS, Mejer H, Nielsen SS, Sandøe P. How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies. Animals. 2022;12. 662. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050662

Author

Thuesen, Ida Sofie ; Agerholm, Jørgen Steen ; Mejer, Helena ; Nielsen, Søren Saxmose ; Sandøe, Peter. / How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies. In: Animals. 2022 ; Vol. 12.

Bibtex

@article{fbddf037f69c4727922f7c82a13701ac,
title = "How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies",
abstract = "Free ranging unsocialised domestic cats are widely believed to suffer from a high load of welfare problems. We assessed the validity of this belief by performing necropsies on the corpses of 598 unsocialised cats, originating from all parts of Denmark, that had been euthanised by two Danish cat welfare organisations. We selected a number of variables for health-related cat welfare that could be assessed through necropsy (e.g., gross lesions, ectoparasites and body condition) or by laboratory analysis (e.g., infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and by feline leukaemia virus (FeLV)). Each finding was classified as having either a major or minor welfare impact on the cat. More than 83% of the cats had no major finding, and 54% had no finding indicating a welfare issue at all. More than 83% of the cats had a body condition within normal range. Only 0.3% were emaciated. The most common finding was infestation with ectoparasites, with 15.9% infected with lice, 12.3% with fleas, 4.7% with ticks, and 6.7% with ear mites. FIV and FeLV were detected in 9.2% and 1.2% of the cases, respectively. The most common lesion related to the cats{\textquoteright} teeth. Overall, unsocialised cats in Denmark have a moderate level of health-related welfare problems.",
author = "Thuesen, {Ida Sofie} and Agerholm, {J{\o}rgen Steen} and Helena Mejer and Nielsen, {S{\o}ren Saxmose} and Peter Sand{\o}e",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.3390/ani12050662",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Animals",
issn = "2076-2615",
publisher = "MDPI",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How serious are health-related welfare problems in unowned unsocialised domestic cats? A study from Denmark based on 598 necropsies

AU - Thuesen, Ida Sofie

AU - Agerholm, Jørgen Steen

AU - Mejer, Helena

AU - Nielsen, Søren Saxmose

AU - Sandøe, Peter

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Free ranging unsocialised domestic cats are widely believed to suffer from a high load of welfare problems. We assessed the validity of this belief by performing necropsies on the corpses of 598 unsocialised cats, originating from all parts of Denmark, that had been euthanised by two Danish cat welfare organisations. We selected a number of variables for health-related cat welfare that could be assessed through necropsy (e.g., gross lesions, ectoparasites and body condition) or by laboratory analysis (e.g., infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and by feline leukaemia virus (FeLV)). Each finding was classified as having either a major or minor welfare impact on the cat. More than 83% of the cats had no major finding, and 54% had no finding indicating a welfare issue at all. More than 83% of the cats had a body condition within normal range. Only 0.3% were emaciated. The most common finding was infestation with ectoparasites, with 15.9% infected with lice, 12.3% with fleas, 4.7% with ticks, and 6.7% with ear mites. FIV and FeLV were detected in 9.2% and 1.2% of the cases, respectively. The most common lesion related to the cats’ teeth. Overall, unsocialised cats in Denmark have a moderate level of health-related welfare problems.

AB - Free ranging unsocialised domestic cats are widely believed to suffer from a high load of welfare problems. We assessed the validity of this belief by performing necropsies on the corpses of 598 unsocialised cats, originating from all parts of Denmark, that had been euthanised by two Danish cat welfare organisations. We selected a number of variables for health-related cat welfare that could be assessed through necropsy (e.g., gross lesions, ectoparasites and body condition) or by laboratory analysis (e.g., infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and by feline leukaemia virus (FeLV)). Each finding was classified as having either a major or minor welfare impact on the cat. More than 83% of the cats had no major finding, and 54% had no finding indicating a welfare issue at all. More than 83% of the cats had a body condition within normal range. Only 0.3% were emaciated. The most common finding was infestation with ectoparasites, with 15.9% infected with lice, 12.3% with fleas, 4.7% with ticks, and 6.7% with ear mites. FIV and FeLV were detected in 9.2% and 1.2% of the cases, respectively. The most common lesion related to the cats’ teeth. Overall, unsocialised cats in Denmark have a moderate level of health-related welfare problems.

U2 - 10.3390/ani12050662

DO - 10.3390/ani12050662

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35268230

VL - 12

JO - Animals

JF - Animals

SN - 2076-2615

M1 - 662

ER -

ID: 300019185