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Mental Health Disease or Preventable Problem? Australian Dog Trainers' Opinions about Canine Separation Anxiety Differ with Training Style.

Authors :
Hunter, Trepheena
van Rooy, Diane
McArthur, Michelle
Bennett, Sara
Tuke, Jonathan
Hazel, Susan
Source :
Animals (2076-2615). Aug2020, Vol. 10 Issue 8, p1393. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Simple Summary: Separation anxiety is common. Signs are seen when dogs are alone or separated from their owner, and include destructive behaviour, vocalising, restlessness, and house soiling. Many dog owners do not seek help from veterinarians but might see a trainer. The Australian dog training industry is not regulated. Trainers have a range of experience, education, and qualifications, and use a variety of techniques. We surveyed trainers' opinions about separation anxiety and found significant differences between reward-based and balanced trainers. Reward-based trainers rated involvement of a veterinarian and use of medication as more important than balanced trainers. More balanced trainers reported that medication was rarely necessary in the cases that they saw. Half the reward-based trainers believed separation anxiety was preventable compared with 95% of balanced trainers. We conclude that opinions about separation anxiety vary between trainers using reward-based and balanced training. Trainers are not taught, expected, or legally allowed to diagnose anxiety disorders. This study found that balanced trainers were less likely to recommend involvement of veterinarians who can make a diagnosis and rule out other causes of observed behaviours. Understanding differences in trainer attitudes may help to improve communication between trainers and veterinarians to better support dogs with separation anxiety. Separation anxiety is common. Many dog owners do not seek help from a veterinarian but might consult a trainer. The objective of this study was to investigate Australian trainers' opinions about separation anxiety. An online survey was distributed via training organisations, resulting in 63 completed surveys. Descriptive statistics and Fisher's exact tests were applied. Respondents were grouped into reward-based (n = 41) and balanced (n = 22) trainers. Most trainers (82.5%) used multiple methods to identify separation anxiety but only 7.9% referred to a veterinarian for diagnosis. Reward-based trainers ranked assistance from a veterinarian and owner's willingness to try medication as more important than balanced trainers (p < 0.05). More balanced trainers reported that medication was rarely necessary in the cases they saw: 50% balanced compared with 4.9% reward-based trainers, with 95% CIs of [28.2, 71.8] and [0.6, 16.5], respectively. Almost all (95.5%) balanced trainers believed separation anxiety was preventable compared with 52.6% of reward-based trainers (p < 0.05). We conclude that opinions about separation anxiety varied between reward-based and balanced trainers. Trainers are not taught, expected, or legally allowed to diagnose anxiety disorders. This study showed that balanced trainers were less likely to recommend involvement of veterinarians who can make a diagnosis and rule out other causes of observed behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762615
Volume :
10
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Animals (2076-2615)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145286460
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10081393