Maddie's® Insights is our ongoing webcast series with practical tips based on current research to help pets and people. Join us in May when Dr. @lisa gunter will present her reseach findings from a recently published study about weeklong fostering and co-housing.
Thursday, May 14 at 12n Pacific for one hour. This webcast will be recorded.
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Meeting both the physical and psychological needs of dogs living in animal shelters is a challenging proposition. Negative environmental inputs, such as excessive noise, restrictive kenneling, and social isolation, contribute to compromised canine welfare. Human-animal interaction, such as a temporary stay in a caregiver's home, has been shown to reduce dogs' cortisol levels and increase their rest. What is not well understood, though, is if longer durations of foster care could extend those benefits. In addition, co-housing in the animal shelter has been even less explored scientifically, but previous studies suggest that dogs' behavior can be improved through living with another dog.
In this webcast, we will:
• discuss previous research about field trips and sleepovers
• describe new findings about weeklong fostering and co-housing
• differentiate how to utilize field trips, sleepovers, and weeklong fostering to positively impact dogs' proximate and distal welfare
• recognize utility of co-housing on entry into the animal shelter
Earn continuing education credit from The Association for Animal Welfare Advancement towards 1.0 CAWA CEs. This webinar has also been pre-approved for 1.0 continuing education credits by the National Animal Care & Control Association (NACA). It has also been approved for 1 hour of continuing education credit in jurisdictions which recognize RACE approval for on-demand viewers. We will post the recording on Maddie's University a day or so after the live webcast.
About our speaker
Lisa Gunter, PhD, MA, CBCC-KA
Dr. Lisa Gunter is an Assistant Professor at Virginia Tech in the School of Animal Sciences and directs the Companion Animal Research & Education (CARE) Lab. Lisa's research explores the behavior and welfare of companion animals, specifically our interactions with them, as it relates to animal sheltering, behavioral issues, and training. Prior to joining Virginia Tech, she was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at Coastal Carolina University and the Maddie's Fund Research Fellow at Arizona State University and managed the ASU/VT Maddie's Nationwide Fostering Study. Lisa earned her PhD and MA degrees in the behavioral neuroscience and comparative psychology program at Arizona State University in the Canine Science Collaboratory.
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Alison Gibson
Media Projects Manager
Maddie's Fund
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