What characteristics of dogs help them stay shorter in shelters? Evidence from a polish animal shelter.

IF 1.4 3区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science Pub Date : 2024-02-08 DOI:10.1080/10888705.2024.2308171
Katarzyna Skrzypek, Ewa Zawojska
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Abstract

Staying in animal shelters can be stressful for dogs because of exposure to noise, unfamiliar environment, and social separation. Consequently, the wellbeing of sheltered dogs could be improved through reduction of length of stay in a shelter (LOS). To help inform the development of interventions aimed at LOS reduction, we analyze dogs' characteristics affecting their LOS. We use econometric modeling to identify the characteristics's influence by simultaneously controlling for multiple factors. We use data from Poland's largest animal shelter (11805 observations from the years 2000-2020). We compare two modeling approaches: a Cox survival model, commonly used in animal welfare studies, and an accelerated failure time model, theoretically better fitted to studying time-dependent factors but not yet applied in the context of LOS. We conclude that the latter approach is preferable for studying factors affecting LOS. Male sex, mixed-breed, dark fur, large size, and older age appear to be associated with longer time to adoption for dogs. To our knowledge, this is the first econometric examination of factors affecting LOS in a country in Central and Eastern Europe.

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狗的哪些特征有助于缩短它们在收容所的停留时间?来自波兰动物收容所的证据。
由于暴露在噪音、陌生环境和社交分离的环境中,待在动物收容所可能会给狗带来压力。因此,可以通过缩短狗在收容所的逗留时间(LOS)来改善被收容狗的健康状况。为了帮助制定旨在缩短收容时间的干预措施,我们分析了影响收容时间的狗的特征。我们使用计量经济学模型,通过同时控制多种因素来确定这些特征的影响。我们使用的数据来自波兰最大的动物收容所(2000-2020 年的 11805 个观测值)。我们比较了两种建模方法:一种是动物福利研究中常用的考克斯生存模型,另一种是加速失效时间模型,后者在理论上更适合研究时间依赖因素,但尚未应用于 LOS。我们的结论是,后者更适合用于研究影响 LOS 的因素。雄性、混种、深色皮毛、体型大和年龄大似乎与狗的领养时间较长有关。据我们所知,这是首次在中欧和东欧国家对影响领养时间的因素进行计量经济学研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
52
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science (JAAWS) publishes articles on methods of experimentation, husbandry, and care that demonstrably enhance the welfare of nonhuman animals in various settings. For administrative purposes, manuscripts are categorized into the following four content areas: welfare issues arising in laboratory, farm, companion animal, and wildlife/zoo settings. Manuscripts of up to 7,000 words are accepted that present new empirical data or a reevaluation of available data, conceptual or theoretical analysis, or demonstrations relating to some issue of animal welfare science. JAAWS also publishes brief research reports of up to 3,500 words that consist of (1) pilot studies, (2) descriptions of innovative practices, (3) studies of interest to a particular region, or (4) studies done by scholars who are new to the field or new to academic publishing. In addition, JAAWS publishes book reviews and literature reviews by invitation only.
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