Strand Elizabeth B, Scoresby Kristel, Walker Hannah, Hernandez Ana, Accornero Veronica, Messinger Lori, Linden Pamela, Ward Chesney, Knight Matthew P, Engelman Haley, Moore Kristin, Slater Margaret Ruth
Colleges of Social Work and Veterinary Medicine, Center for Veterinary Social Work, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, United States.
College of Social Work, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2024 Jul 17;11:1422359. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1422359. eCollection 2024.
Perception of quality of life for cats and dogs of low-income Spanish and English-speaking veterinary clients attending problem focused or routine veterinary visits is an important area of focus for community based veterinary service providers. Using a qualitative approach, 50 New York City based American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) veterinary clients completed semi-structured interviews as well as a survey about their perception of life with their pets. Veterinary clients shared both human-animal bond (HAB) related and quality of life (QoL) related factors in their daily experience of life with their pets. Results indicated that this demographic perceives QoL similarly to previous QoL research that either does not report sample demographics or reports sample demographics with more affluence. Moreover, 60% of qualitative excerpts included both HAB and QoL themes and 40% were discretely HAB or QoL. An analog single item 10-point scale measuring veterinary client perception of their pets QoL did not differentiate between sample demographics at a statistically significant level. Finally, pet QoL literature has not traditionally reflected diverse demographic identities of veterinary clients or widely included reliable and valid measures of the human-animal bond (HAB). These results support the importance of measuring the HAB when researching pet QoL and provide evidence that lower-income Spanish and English-speaking veterinary clients are similarly bonded and attentive to their pets as other demographics.
对于参加针对特定问题或常规兽医诊疗的低收入讲西班牙语和英语的兽医客户而言,其对猫狗生活质量的认知是社区兽医服务提供者重点关注的一个重要领域。采用定性研究方法,50位纽约市美国防止虐待动物协会(ASPCA)的兽医客户完成了半结构化访谈以及一项关于他们对与宠物生活认知的调查。兽医客户在与宠物的日常相处中分享了与人类-动物关系(HAB)以及生活质量(QoL)相关的因素。结果表明,这一人群对生活质量的认知与之前的生活质量研究相似,之前的研究要么未报告样本人口统计学特征,要么报告的是更富裕人群的样本人口统计学特征。此外,60%的定性摘录包含人类-动物关系和生活质量两个主题,40%则分别是关于人类-动物关系或生活质量。一个用于衡量兽医客户对其宠物生活质量认知的类似单项目10分制量表在统计学显著水平上并未区分样本人口统计学特征。最后,宠物生活质量的文献传统上并未反映兽医客户多样的人口统计学身份,也未广泛纳入可靠且有效的人类-动物关系衡量指标。这些结果支持了在研究宠物生活质量时衡量人类-动物关系的重要性,并提供了证据表明讲西班牙语和英语的低收入兽医客户与其他人群一样,与他们的宠物有着相似的情感联系且对其十分关注。