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A Survey of the Methods Used in Shelter and Rescue Programs to Identify Feral and Frightened Pet Cats

 
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Short Description:
Animal shelters often have different policies for feral cats and cats who are socialized. Researchers sought to determine how animal shelters decide whether cats are feral, socialized cats who are frightened, or semi-feral cats that had once lived with people and could do so again, but who had been living outside for a time. Most respondents were from the US, though there were also respondents from Canada, the UK, Puerto Rico, and Guam. In total, only 15% of these shelters had any written guidelines to follow.

Abstract:
Article Abstract:

"Despite the lack of validated methods for differentiating feral from frightened socialized cats upon intake to animal welfare agencies, these organizations must make handling and disposition decisions for millions of cats each year based on their presumed socialization status. We conducted a nationwide survey of feline welfare stakeholders to learn about methods used to evaluate and categorize incoming cats, amount of time cats are held before assessment, disposition options available, and the level of cooperation among welfare agencies to minimize euthanasia of ferals. A wide variety of assessment methods were described and only 15% of 555 respondents had written guidelines. Holding periods of 1–3 days were common, and cats deemed feral were often euthanased. About half the shelters transferred ferals to trap–neuter–return (TNR) programs at least occasionally. Results highlight the need for validated assessment methods to facilitate judicious holding and disposition decisions for unowned cats at time of intake."


Spot Check Number: 1886
Sponsor: American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), City University of New York
Researcher/Author: Margaret R Slater, Katherine A Miller, Emily Weiss, Kathleen V Makolinski & Weisbrot
Animal Type: Cats
Record Type: Journal Article, Research Study
Research Method: Online Survey
Geographic Region: United States National, International
Number of Participants: 569
Population Descriptors: Animal shelters
Year Conducted: 2010
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