If only…

2023 has come to a close and we have moved into a New Year. And rather than this be a time for resolutions, it’s a time for reflection.

It was a year of ups and downs for me, and AniEd, with some serious downs around the middle and some temporary and unofficial suspensions of services for mental health breaks. It ended in a whirl wind, and on the up, that I think I’m still processing.

And not just last year, but the last few years. We, as a global society, emerged from the strangest of times…from a Pandemic that I certainly don’t think we’ve taken the space or time to process.

And that’s affected the world of dogs, and dogs for this world, greatly.

2023 Stats

In review of last year, about 64% of the dogs I saw (through AniEd’s Behaviour Matters programs) had come home during Pandemic conditions, which in Ireland, went on and on. These dogs had even higher expectations thrust upon them…dogs were seen as cure-alls to treat your lockdown-ills throughout that time.

These dogs came home when the world was very odd indeed, and of course those conditions couldn’t persist and within, on average, 1-3 years of arriving home, they and their humans required intense and very specialised help.

There wasn’t a dog to be got throughout the country from pounds, rescues, breeders, DBEs…or from anywhere. Such was the panacea that dogs, at that time, represented.

Over the 12 months of 2023 I saw more cases involving behavioural euthanasia than ever before. 23% of my cases ended sadly and all but one of those dogs came home during Pandemic conditions.
Another 4% were rehomed due to their behaviour too.

That’s over a quarter of these dogs, and their humans, suffering under their current environmental conditions. And I do mean suffering.

No shaming. No blaming.

While these data make me sad, they also make me regretful, frustrated, exhausted, and sometimes even angry.

Let me be very clear here. This is not about guardian-bashing. Pet owners/guardians are our most vulnerable stakeholders in our industry; high expectations, little support, substandard education yet all the blame and all the shame is directed at guardians. We don’t shame or blame here.

But I am going to hold our animal care industries and dog producers, including breeders and rescues, to higher standards than guardians. We are supposed to be the ones setting the tone, providing the support, being ambassadors, guiding and educating.

When I work through histories with each guardian, on behalf of their dog, I spot markers along their journeys where if only they had received the right guidance, if only their decisions had been better directed, if only they had got in touch…if only…

If only…sourcing

If only we could have been there to support and guide these prospective guardians in choosing a suitable source for their dog.

I don’t care about ideologies, I care about welfare. So when dogs are reared, kept, or handled in ways that do not support welfare and behavioural health, that that dog has come from a rescue organisation, from a DBE, from a breeder, is not a priority to me.
What does the dog’s behaviour say about their experiences? What does the dog’s behaviour say about what they are going to need to remain healthy (behavioural health is health) and for welfare to be maintained?

60% of the dogs I saw last year in relation to behaviours of concern had been reared outside of a home environment and/or spent time in kennels/outside home environments during vulnerable behaviour developmental periods.

Dogs, who are expected to live as companion animals in family environments, are less likely to be successful when reared like livestock. Dogs have different developmental periods to livestock and require careful exposure to the worlds with which they are expected to cope when they are young. Not to mention the expectations thrust upon dogs by humans and society.

Did you know that the first FIVE weeks of a puppy’s life are exceptionally important to support brain building?!
Did you know that the first THREE-ish months of a puppy’s life are exceptionally important to support brain development?
Did you know that the FIRST year (at least) of their life is exceptionally important to support social behaviour development?

We have so little time to do so much so carefully. And it’s very difficult to do this when the dogs are not developing in enriched environments, supported through enriched experiences.

If only…country folk & city folk

Just like with early rearing experiences, during puppyhood and adolescence, the world in which a dog has been living prepares them for that world.

So when we take dogs from rural, quiet circumstances and bring them a world away to the city and the depths of suburbia, there will often be difficulties.

And that’s exactly what happened 57% of the dogs I saw last year. Dogs who had been provided with minimal exposure and then expected to slot into the hustle and bustle of Dublin. Of family comings and goings. Of traffic and doorbells and bangs and construction. Of seemingly non-stop action. Having been prepared for a quieter and slower life.

If only…too little, too late

We well understand that guardians tend to seek help for their dog’s behaviour reactively and usually when their dog’s behaviour becomes obstructive for the humans.

Sadly, just 23% of guardians had sought any training from a professional (calling themselves trainers, behaviourists, vets) regarding their dog’s behaviour but only when things were going South.
Just 4% had any professional training in place proactively…before any behaviours of concern had reared their ugly heads.

My entire hope in developing AniEd as an educator for trainers was to reduce reactivity and promote proactivity. By getting the best trainers out there and into the lives of guardians and their pets, surely we can prevent behaviours of concern arising…right?!

Guardians who had rehomed their dogs had little to no support post-adoption, with most not being able to source recommendations for help from the organisations from whom they had adopted dogs. Just 2% of guardians (who had adopted from a rescue organisation) had help in place for their newly adopted dog in their first three months home…and that was mainly me…because their dog’s behaviour had deteriorated to concerning levels during this time.

88% of cases that sadly ended with behavioural euthanasia had been dogs adopted from rescue organisations. Guardians, new adopters and rescue organisations need better and more support to make sure that dogs go to the right homes, stay in those homes, are safe in those homes and thrive in those homes.

If only…let’s get physical

The connections between physical and behavioural health are well established…behavioural health is health.

And 53% of the dogs I saw relating to behaviours of concern were experiencing or suspected to be experiencing physical contributors, most commonly signs relating to musculo-skeletal pain and gastro-intestinal inflammation. Behaviours can be considered clinical signs of pain and physical disorder.

Almost all of these dogs had no treatment or veterinary plan in place relating to their physical disorders before we started our program. For the most part, seeking veterinary consultation has been an important part of program development and we need veterinary personnel on board to treat pain and GI discomfort proactively. Dogs are stoic and they don’t make the diagnosis of chronic pain easy for us.

What’s more, 41% of dogs were assessed as overweight at the beginning of our program and most guardians had not been aware. Of course, this is never an easy conversation to have but carrying extra weight is contributing to a welfare crisis for companion animals In Ireland, and beyond.

Correlation is not causation

These data are just from one small business for whom these are not our primary services. How meaningful are they in the grand scheme of things?

But, to me, these data are impactful. The numbers tell me about the experiences of these dogs, and their humans.

And most importantly, they tell me where our efforts are needed, where our industry needs to direct its attention.

But we need help. While we, as an industry, must present ourselves as educated professionals with years of experience and years of building knowledge and skills, guardians must begin to recognise that.

Every single guardian I work with experiences revelations during our first conversations. The level of knowledge of canine behaviour and skill in teaching and handling pet dogs, among guardians (and many pros too) needs a lot of building and development. We are all learning always, including me. Every case teaches me so much.

Decades of shaming and blaming guardians has been emphasised by TV training and now, social media, where it seems you can’t do anything right for your dog. Almost all guardians who come to work with me express that they have experienced that and that they have sought help with trepidation.

When the prevailing culture says that “there are no bad dogs, just bad owners“, that “puppies are clean slates” or “it’s all in how they’re raised” and other myths, it’s no wonder we have difficulty reaching our target market in time.

Reflections

In reflecting on the year past and stepping into this New Year coming, I see plenty of ways we can make things better for dogs and their humans. But we need help, we need collaboration and connection. Working together with a central focus on welfare allows us to dig our way out of these many pits, and progress.

And besides all that serious stuff, make this New Year more dog. At a time so obsessed with deprivation in all that New-Year-New-You marketing, make 2024 MORE DOG.

I haven’t added pictures and funny memes to this one in respect of this reflection. Sorry if it’s all been a bit wordy (about 1600-ish words) so if you’ve made it this far, thank you! Let’s start digging and making progress in the lives of pets & their people!

6 thoughts on “If only…”

  1. Thank you for your clear and honest reflections.
    Your insights are tremendously helpful and inspiring to training professionals, like me as well as guardians.
    Know that your leadership is making a difference.
    Thank you.

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  2. An absolutely brilliant and poignant post.
    Thank you for sharing this and it will be interesting to review my own statistics, I’m quiet sure we’ll see some parallels, sadly.

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    1. Thank you! I imagine there will be similarities. But at least we can identify specific areas of improvement – that’s my mandate for 2024, to work on those!
      Thank you for all the work you do!

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  3. Such heart breaking information and stats – so sad that instead of humans being able to decrease euthanasia and unwanted dogs in rescues and shelters- the numbers have sky rocketed to over flowing numbers.
    Shameful that more people do not spay and neuter and that puppy mills continue to produce.
    Thank you to you and all those who try and advocate and help the many dogs and to trying to educate society.

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    1. Thanks!

      But the numbers here are very strange. In terms of official numbers of unwanted dogs, they’re similar to the last pre-Pandemic year. However, every rescue organisation I see is reporting being over-run.
      So, where are the differences? Is homing just very very slow? Is that many dogs are not going through official, recorded and accountable channels and instead going directly to rescue organisations?
      Are there lots of dogs bouncing? I am certainly seeing that.
      Are dogs just being held longer so not moving through the system?

      I see rescues in other jurisdictions report the same – that dogs are longer in the system so perhaps it seems that homing has slowed down. Why is that happening?

      Have destinations to which we have typically been exporting dogs dried up in terms of homing too?

      Here, once dogs leave the pound system there is minimal further oversight and no recording of individual dogs, besides passporting for exportation.

      Neutering is just one small component and I don’t know that we can rely on it too heavily, particularly alone.
      I do think that subsidised neutering should be available via the State, and not relying on charities to provide.

      But without education and support, it just becomes about shaming people.
      Almost all the dogs in my stats are neutered – again just a correlation, and many people will get their dogs neutered as they believe it might help reduce behaviour “problems” (invariably, it doesn’t).

      I do believe that reaching the consumers on those points illustrated here that appear as significant risk factors in negatively impacting welfare could go a long way. Reaching those markets, educating them without using extreme examples and without shaming is a challenge.

      Just acquiring your dog from a place where that dog was reared and kept in a family home would be a massive plus. If we only present these extreme images of “puppy farms”, then that’s what they think they need to avoid.

      We’ve certainly got a journey ahead of us. I feel the Pandemic had a massive impact at many levels and we’re only beginning to face the clean up of that.

      Thanks for your comment, let’s keep spreading the word!

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