Wu Haorui, Bains Ravinder Sarah, Preston Carole
School of Social Work, Dalhousie University, 3201-1459 LeMarchant St., PO Box 15000, Halifax, NS, B3H 4R2, Canada.
Int J Disaster Risk Reduct. 2023 Jun 15;92:103719. doi: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103719. Epub 2023 Apr 24.
Women's health-specific contributions in emergency response stages pertain primarily to family and community-based rescue and support-focused roles. As disasters affect both human beings and their animal co-inhabitants, comprehensive literature exploring women's contributions towards companion animal welfare in emergency response settings remains sparse. COVID-19-triggered public health mitigation strategies caused diverse challenges relating to veterinary medical service access, thus establishing a platform for a nuanced exploration of gendered roles vis-a-vis animal health and well-being during the initial COVID-19 emergency response period. This project employs a semi-structured interview approach to qualitatively investigate the roles, responsibilities, and experiences of twelve people, eleven of whom self-identify as women, who cared for animal co-inhabitants while seeking veterinary medical services during the COVID-19 emergency response in Metro Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. This research identifies three primary animal welfare-related roles that woman companion animal guardians (WCAGs) assumed during the COVID-19 emergency response period: 1) Companion animal physical health caregiver, spanning from nuclear to extended families and into the community; 2) Companion animal mental wellness supporter, associated with human-animal interactions in family/household, community, and veterinary clinic settings; 3) Companion animal holistic well-being advocate, utilizing various strategies at family, community, and societal levels. Understanding gender-specific animal welfare contributions in an emergency response setting narrows knowledge gaps and provides WCAGs and animal welfare-related public, private, and not-for-profit sectors with evidence-based strategies for emergency response planning improvements, supporting healthy and sustainable human-animal bonds in the current COVID-19 pandemic and future extreme events.
妇女在应急阶段对健康的贡献主要涉及以家庭和社区为基础的救援以及以支持为重点的角色。由于灾难会影响人类及其动物同住者,探索妇女在应急环境中对伴侣动物福利贡献的全面文献仍然很少。新冠疫情引发的公共卫生缓解策略带来了与兽医医疗服务获取相关的各种挑战,从而为在新冠疫情应急初期对动物健康和福祉方面的性别角色进行细致入微的探索搭建了一个平台。本项目采用半结构化访谈方法,对12人(其中11人自我认定为女性)在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省大温哥华地区新冠疫情应急期间寻求兽医医疗服务时照顾动物同住者的角色、责任和经历进行定性调查。本研究确定了女性伴侣动物监护人(WCAGs)在新冠疫情应急期间承担的三个与动物福利相关的主要角色:1)伴侣动物身体健康照顾者,范围从核心家庭到大家庭再到社区;2)伴侣动物心理健康支持者,与家庭/住户、社区和兽医诊所环境中的人宠互动相关;3)伴侣动物整体福祉倡导者,在家庭、社区和社会层面采用各种策略。了解应急环境中特定性别的动物福利贡献可以缩小知识差距,并为女性伴侣动物监护人以及与动物福利相关的公共、私营和非营利部门提供基于证据的策略,以改进应急响应计划,在当前的新冠疫情以及未来的极端事件中支持健康和可持续的人宠关系。