Conceptual and methodological issues relating to pain assessment in mammals: The development and utilisation of pain facial expression scales

•There are conceptual and methodological problems for animal pain assessment.•Facial expression scales are valid, reliable pain recognition and evaluation tools.•Consistent and careful development of facial expression scales is required.•Facial expression scales need feasibility testing to aid use i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied animal behaviour science 2019-08, Vol.217, p.1-15
Hauptverfasser: McLennan, Krista M., Miller, Amy L., Dalla Costa, Emanuela, Stucke, Diana, Corke, Murray J., Broom, Donald M., Leach, Matthew C.
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container_end_page 15
container_issue
container_start_page 1
container_title Applied animal behaviour science
container_volume 217
creator McLennan, Krista M.
Miller, Amy L.
Dalla Costa, Emanuela
Stucke, Diana
Corke, Murray J.
Broom, Donald M.
Leach, Matthew C.
description •There are conceptual and methodological problems for animal pain assessment.•Facial expression scales are valid, reliable pain recognition and evaluation tools.•Consistent and careful development of facial expression scales is required.•Facial expression scales need feasibility testing to aid use in clinical practice.•Guidelines are provided for development and use of facial expression scales. Effective management of pain is critical to the improvement of animal welfare. For this to happen, pain must be recognised and assessed in a variety of contexts. Pain is a complex phenomenon, making reliable, valid, and feasible measurement challenging. The use of facial expressions as a technique to assess pain in non-verbal human patients has been widely utilised for many years. More recently this technique has been developed for use in a number of non-human species: rodents, rabbits, ferrets, cats, sheep, pigs and horses. Facial expression scoring has been demonstrated to provide an effective means of identifying animal pain and in assessing its severity, overcoming some of the limitations of other measures for pain assessment in animals. However, there remain limitations and challenges to the use of facial expression as a welfare assessment tool which must be investigated. This paper reviews current facial expression pain scales (“Grimace Scales”), discussing the general conceptual and methodological issues faced when assessing pain, and highlighting the advantages of using facial expression scales over other pain assessment methods. We provide guidance on how facial expression scales should be developed so as to be valid and reliable, but we also provide guidance on how they should be used in clinical practice.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.applanim.2019.06.001
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Effective management of pain is critical to the improvement of animal welfare. For this to happen, pain must be recognised and assessed in a variety of contexts. Pain is a complex phenomenon, making reliable, valid, and feasible measurement challenging. The use of facial expressions as a technique to assess pain in non-verbal human patients has been widely utilised for many years. More recently this technique has been developed for use in a number of non-human species: rodents, rabbits, ferrets, cats, sheep, pigs and horses. Facial expression scoring has been demonstrated to provide an effective means of identifying animal pain and in assessing its severity, overcoming some of the limitations of other measures for pain assessment in animals. However, there remain limitations and challenges to the use of facial expression as a welfare assessment tool which must be investigated. 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subjects Animal care
Animal welfare
Clinical practice
Facial expression
Horses
Methods
Pain
Rabbits
Rodents
Sheep
Swine
Welfare
title Conceptual and methodological issues relating to pain assessment in mammals: The development and utilisation of pain facial expression scales
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