Porcine Health Management (Jul 2024)

Landscape review about the decision to euthanize a compromised pig

  • J. Stoffregen,
  • T. Winkelmann,
  • B. Schneider,
  • K. Gerdes,
  • M. Miller,
  • J. Reinmold,
  • C. Kleinsorgen,
  • K. H. Toelle,
  • L. Kreienbrock,
  • E. grosse Beilage

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40813-024-00378-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Timely euthanasia of a compromised pig in farming practice has been identified as a critical topic in veterinary medicine. The questions ‘why and when are pigs euthanized’ and ‘what influences the decision making process’ need to be answered to improve the situation. In the past five years, work addressing these issues has been published in the literature, however, a synthesis of the findings is missing. With the help of a quantitative and qualitative analysis, this paper has generated a landscape review to outline major topics, the role of clinical signs and further influences on the decision to euthanize a pig. Due to the quantitative content analysis, 58 topics have been identified with the role of welfare as a justification and training for caretakers in making euthanasia decisions as the most frequently mentioned. The qualitative analysis of why and when a pig is euthanized generated a set of clinical signs for organ tracts, and a set of categories influencing the decision making process. The results outline the need to increase research on details specific to understanding how clinical signs evolve over time before euthanasia. In summary, the analysis provides an overview of work in the field and ideas on how to close knowledge gaps in the future. Moreover, the article contributes to harmonize efforts in the field and underlines the need for more research about the care of compromised and injured pigs.