Veterinární Medicína (Aug 2004)

An attitude of veterinary practitioners towards animal rights in Turkey

  • A. Ozen,
  • R. Ozturk,
  • A. Yasar,
  • A. Armutak,
  • T. Basagac,
  • A. Ozgur,
  • I. Seker,
  • H. Yerlikaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17221/5708-VETMED
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 8
pp. 298 – 304

Abstract

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The authors examined the attitudes of veterinary practitioners in Turkey towards animals' right to life. For this purpose, a telephone questionnaire was applied on a total of 303 practitioners located in four provinces in Turkey. The overall response rate was 82%. The respect for right to life was valued slightly over neutral. According to the 5-point Likert scale, the average value scored by the participants for the items of views about animals' right to life was found as 3.25. Type of practice (pet clinics: 3.41), gender (females: 3.63), perceived responsibility (to animal: 3.48), keeping a pet (yes: 3.34) and membership in a society (yes: 3.67) had a statistically significant influence on attitudes towards animals' right to life. Independent variables explained 87% of the variance in attitudes, with most of the variance accounted for by perceived responsibility.

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