Paterson Emilie A, O'Malley Carly I, Abney Dawn M, Archibald William J, Turner Patricia V
Dept of Pathobiology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, N1G 2W1, Canada.
Global Animal Welfare & Training, Charles River, Wilmington, MA, 01887, USA.
Anim Welf. 2024 Jan 24;33:e3. doi: 10.1017/awf.2024.3. eCollection 2024.
Primates are important species for biomedical research and ensuring their good welfare is critical for research translatability and ethical responsibility. Systematic animal welfare assessments can support continuous programme improvements and build institutional awareness of areas requiring more attention. A multi-facility, collaborative project aimed to develop and implement a novel primate welfare assessment tool (PWAT) for use with research macaques. PWAT development involved: establishing an internal focus group of primate subject matter experts, identifying animal welfare categories and descriptors based on literature review, developing a preliminary tool, beta-testing the tool to ensure practicality and final consensus on descriptors, finalising the tool in a database with semi-automated data analysis, and delivering the tool to 13 sites across four countries. The tool uses input- and outcome-based measures from six categories: physical, behavioural, training, environmental, procedural, and culture of care. The final tool has 133 descriptors weighted based upon welfare impact, and is split into three forms for ease of use (room level, site level, and personnel interviews). The PWAT was trialled across facilities in March and September 2022 for benchmarking current macaque behavioural management programmes. The tool successfully distinguished strengths and challenges at the facility level and across sites. Following this benchmarking, the tool is being applied semi-annually to assess and monitor progress in behavioural management programmes. The development process of the PWAT demonstrates that evidence-based assessment tools can be developed through collaboration and consensus building, which are important for uptake and applicability, and ultimately for promoting global improvements in research macaque welfare.
灵长类动物是生物医学研究的重要物种,确保它们的良好福利对于研究的可转化性和道德责任至关重要。系统的动物福利评估可以支持项目的持续改进,并增强机构对需要更多关注领域的认识。一个多机构合作项目旨在开发并实施一种用于研究猕猴的新型灵长类动物福利评估工具(PWAT)。PWAT的开发包括:成立一个由灵长类动物主题专家组成的内部焦点小组,基于文献综述确定动物福利类别和描述符,开发初步工具,对该工具进行测试以确保其实用性并就描述符达成最终共识,在一个具备半自动数据分析功能的数据库中完成该工具的定稿,并将该工具交付给四个国家的13个研究地点。该工具使用来自六个类别的基于输入和结果的衡量标准:身体状况、行为表现、训练情况、环境条件、操作流程以及护理文化。最终工具包含133个根据福利影响加权的描述符,并分为三种形式以便于使用(房间层面、研究地点层面和人员访谈)。PWAT于2022年3月和9月在各研究地点进行了试用,以评估当前猕猴行为管理项目的基准情况。该工具成功区分了各研究地点层面及不同地点之间的优势和挑战。在此基准评估之后,该工具将每半年应用一次,以评估和监测行为管理项目的进展情况。PWAT的开发过程表明,可以通过合作和建立共识来开发基于证据的评估工具,这对于工具的采用和适用性很重要,最终对于促进全球研究猕猴福利的改善也很重要。