Animal hoarding is a complex issue that, when discovered, frequently necessitates opening shelter doors to many animals. This is due to hoarders' inability to provide even the most basic welfare standards for their animals, resulting in poor welfare conditions that frequently border on mistreatment. These people are frequently unaware of their failure to care for their animals, as well as of the harm that they cause to people around them and the environment. They usually do not care for themselves either. The majority of hoarders have difficult histories, and they all need help getting back on track. When the agencies discover the status quo, the animals are usually seized and taken to shelters, where they face a variety of welfare consequences, beginning with confinement in an unknown environment that is associated with additional risks (e.g., infectious diseases, behavioral deterioration, and distress). Furthermore, the targeted shelters are frequently overcrowded and cannot adequately accommodate the large numbers of animals found in hoarders' environments. The One Welfare approach, which is increasingly being used alongside One Health to work at the intersection of human and animal health and welfare, could be adopted to benefit animals while also addressing the poor states of humans. This concept's depiction of the interconnections between animal welfare, human well-being, and the environment can fit with all the components of the animal-hoarding phenomenon, including the peculiarities of the hoarding environment, as well as those of shelters where animals are often moved. The purpose of this paper is to offer insights into how the One Welfare concept may be critical in tackling all of the interests concerned in these cases and offering solutions.

Challenges in Sheltering Seized Animals from Hoarders from a One Welfare Perspective / P. Fossati. - In: ANIMALS. - ISSN 2076-2615. - 13:21(2023 Oct 24), pp. 3303.1-3303.18. [10.3390/ani13213303]

Challenges in Sheltering Seized Animals from Hoarders from a One Welfare Perspective

P. Fossati
2023

Abstract

Animal hoarding is a complex issue that, when discovered, frequently necessitates opening shelter doors to many animals. This is due to hoarders' inability to provide even the most basic welfare standards for their animals, resulting in poor welfare conditions that frequently border on mistreatment. These people are frequently unaware of their failure to care for their animals, as well as of the harm that they cause to people around them and the environment. They usually do not care for themselves either. The majority of hoarders have difficult histories, and they all need help getting back on track. When the agencies discover the status quo, the animals are usually seized and taken to shelters, where they face a variety of welfare consequences, beginning with confinement in an unknown environment that is associated with additional risks (e.g., infectious diseases, behavioral deterioration, and distress). Furthermore, the targeted shelters are frequently overcrowded and cannot adequately accommodate the large numbers of animals found in hoarders' environments. The One Welfare approach, which is increasingly being used alongside One Health to work at the intersection of human and animal health and welfare, could be adopted to benefit animals while also addressing the poor states of humans. This concept's depiction of the interconnections between animal welfare, human well-being, and the environment can fit with all the components of the animal-hoarding phenomenon, including the peculiarities of the hoarding environment, as well as those of shelters where animals are often moved. The purpose of this paper is to offer insights into how the One Welfare concept may be critical in tackling all of the interests concerned in these cases and offering solutions.
No
English
One Welfare; animal hoarding; animal shelter; animal welfare; challenges; companion animals; hoarders; seized animals;
Settore VET/08 - Clinica Medica Veterinaria
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
24-ott-2023
MDPI
13
21
3303
1
18
18
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/13/21/3303
scopus
pubmed
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Challenges in Sheltering Seized Animals from Hoarders from a One Welfare Perspective / P. Fossati. - In: ANIMALS. - ISSN 2076-2615. - 13:21(2023 Oct 24), pp. 3303.1-3303.18. [10.3390/ani13213303]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
P. Fossati
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1021928
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