Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model. / Hampton, Jordan O; Hemsworth, Lauren M; Hemsworth, Paul H; Hyndman, Timothy H; Sandøe, Peter.

In: Animal Welfare, Vol. 32, e62, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hampton, JO, Hemsworth, LM, Hemsworth, PH, Hyndman, TH & Sandøe, P 2023, 'Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model', Animal Welfare, vol. 32, e62. https://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2023.84

APA

Hampton, J. O., Hemsworth, L. M., Hemsworth, P. H., Hyndman, T. H., & Sandøe, P. (2023). Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model. Animal Welfare, 32, [e62]. https://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2023.84

Vancouver

Hampton JO, Hemsworth LM, Hemsworth PH, Hyndman TH, Sandøe P. Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model. Animal Welfare. 2023;32. e62. https://doi.org/10.1017/awf.2023.84

Author

Hampton, Jordan O ; Hemsworth, Lauren M ; Hemsworth, Paul H ; Hyndman, Timothy H ; Sandøe, Peter. / Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model. In: Animal Welfare. 2023 ; Vol. 32.

Bibtex

@article{0dd515c3776b44e487dd99cee848d004,
title = "Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model",
abstract = "The Five Domains model is influential in contemporary studies of animal welfare. It was originally presented as a conceptual model to understand the types of impact that procedures may impose on experimental animals. Its application has since broadened to cover a wide range of animal species and forms of animal use. However, it has also increasingly been applied as an animal welfare assessment tool, which is the focus of this paper. Several critical limitations associated with this approach have not been widely acknowledged, including that: (1) it relies upon expert or stakeholder opinion, with little transparency around the selection of these individuals; (2) quantitative scoring is typically attempted despite the absence of clear principles for aggregation of welfare measures and few attempts to account for uncertainty; (3) there have been few efforts to measure the repeatability of findings; and (4) it does not consider indirect and unintentional impacts such as those imposed on non-target animals. These deficiencies lead to concerns surrounding testability, repeatability and the potential for manipulation. We provide suggestions for refinement of how the Five Domains model is applied to partially address these limitations. We argue that the Five Domains model is useful for systematic consideration of all sources of possible welfare compromise and enhancement, but is not, in its current state, fit-for-purpose as an assessment tool. We argue for wider acknowledgment of the operational limits of using the model as an assessment tool, prioritisation of the studies needed for its validation, and encourage improvements to this approach.",
author = "Hampton, {Jordan O} and Hemsworth, {Lauren M} and Hemsworth, {Paul H} and Hyndman, {Timothy H} and Peter Sand{\o}e",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1017/awf.2023.84",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
journal = "Animal Welfare",
issn = "0962-7286",
publisher = "Universities Federation for Animal Welfare",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Rethinking the utility of the Five Domains model

AU - Hampton, Jordan O

AU - Hemsworth, Lauren M

AU - Hemsworth, Paul H

AU - Hyndman, Timothy H

AU - Sandøe, Peter

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The Five Domains model is influential in contemporary studies of animal welfare. It was originally presented as a conceptual model to understand the types of impact that procedures may impose on experimental animals. Its application has since broadened to cover a wide range of animal species and forms of animal use. However, it has also increasingly been applied as an animal welfare assessment tool, which is the focus of this paper. Several critical limitations associated with this approach have not been widely acknowledged, including that: (1) it relies upon expert or stakeholder opinion, with little transparency around the selection of these individuals; (2) quantitative scoring is typically attempted despite the absence of clear principles for aggregation of welfare measures and few attempts to account for uncertainty; (3) there have been few efforts to measure the repeatability of findings; and (4) it does not consider indirect and unintentional impacts such as those imposed on non-target animals. These deficiencies lead to concerns surrounding testability, repeatability and the potential for manipulation. We provide suggestions for refinement of how the Five Domains model is applied to partially address these limitations. We argue that the Five Domains model is useful for systematic consideration of all sources of possible welfare compromise and enhancement, but is not, in its current state, fit-for-purpose as an assessment tool. We argue for wider acknowledgment of the operational limits of using the model as an assessment tool, prioritisation of the studies needed for its validation, and encourage improvements to this approach.

AB - The Five Domains model is influential in contemporary studies of animal welfare. It was originally presented as a conceptual model to understand the types of impact that procedures may impose on experimental animals. Its application has since broadened to cover a wide range of animal species and forms of animal use. However, it has also increasingly been applied as an animal welfare assessment tool, which is the focus of this paper. Several critical limitations associated with this approach have not been widely acknowledged, including that: (1) it relies upon expert or stakeholder opinion, with little transparency around the selection of these individuals; (2) quantitative scoring is typically attempted despite the absence of clear principles for aggregation of welfare measures and few attempts to account for uncertainty; (3) there have been few efforts to measure the repeatability of findings; and (4) it does not consider indirect and unintentional impacts such as those imposed on non-target animals. These deficiencies lead to concerns surrounding testability, repeatability and the potential for manipulation. We provide suggestions for refinement of how the Five Domains model is applied to partially address these limitations. We argue that the Five Domains model is useful for systematic consideration of all sources of possible welfare compromise and enhancement, but is not, in its current state, fit-for-purpose as an assessment tool. We argue for wider acknowledgment of the operational limits of using the model as an assessment tool, prioritisation of the studies needed for its validation, and encourage improvements to this approach.

U2 - 10.1017/awf.2023.84

DO - 10.1017/awf.2023.84

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38487458

VL - 32

JO - Animal Welfare

JF - Animal Welfare

SN - 0962-7286

M1 - e62

ER -

ID: 368573485