With that said, my ethical argument is going to be on spaying and neutering. This issue affects not only the veterinary profession, but pet owners, and even the general population, although most people don’t realize this.
To be clear, spaying is when the ovaries from a female animal are surgically removed so that they can no longer produce eggs or sex hormones. Neutering is when the testicles are surgically removed from a male animal so that semen and sex hormones are no longer developed.
NOTE: For simplicity’s sake, ProSN = people for spaying and neutering and ConSN= people against spaying and neutering.
One of the main reasons spaying and neutering is recommended by ProSN is because of the excess of animals that are already overcrowding shelters and pounds.
As I
mentioned in my field explanation blog 5-7 million homeless pets are circulated
through US shelters each year, 3-4 million of which are euthanized, not
adopted. The US average for one year of people who experience homelessness in
some way is 2.3-3.5 million while permanently homeless people average at
~805,000, none of which are euthanized. You compare the numbers and tell me if
the US has a pet overpopulation problem or not.
Also, animals are anesthetized during the spay or neuter, so they don’t feel a thing, and they are supplied with pain pills, just like a human would be after surgery. The average spay or neuter “victim” is back to their normal hyperactive self in about 2 days. Like every surgery (including human surgery) because anesthesia is involved and because it is a surgery, there is some risk and the chance that something will go wrong. However, these risks are small and nonexistent with a good veterinarian (also like human surgeries, minus the vet).
ConSN tend to treat animals the same as humans. Animals are not like humans. They don’t the capacity to understand the concept of not mating so extraneous offspring aren’t born. Males do not miss their “family jewels” like a castrated human would. Females don’t need to be moms to be “complete”. They don’t even treat sex like humans do. Aside from dolphins, humans are the only species on earth that has sex for fun. Every other species, including companion animals, breeds to propagate the species. And they are amazingly good at it.
People tend to imprint their own feelings and thinking
patterns onto animals, which leads to the “animals are people too” idea.
Animals do not build skyscrapers. Animals do not use computers. Animals do not
have pets. Because of these differences, pets must be treated differently from their owners, no matter how human
they act.
A vast
majority of a vet tech’s job is communication of proper animal care to pet
owners. Being able to talk to people effectively about proper care, training,
nutrition, exercise, health, and whether they should spay or neuter is
literally a make-or-break job qualification for a vet tech. And one of the
things we try and point out to pet owners, especially new pet owners is the need for them
to be good stewards.
In the US, we have a tendency to have “disposable” pets. A lot of people like and want a pet, but they fail to understand all of the implications involved in pet ownership, all of the responsibilities. A lot of people think that when things get hard, or even if the pet just annoys you, give up the pet, and there are no consequences. For the human.
Fully half
of the pets given up or abandoned at animal shelters never find good homes, and
are euthanized because there is just not enough space for every shelter to be a
no-kill operation (no-kill means that once an animal is given up/abandoned, it
is kept by the shelter until a suitable home is found, for life if that’s what
it takes). No-kill is a noble cause, but for many pet charities, it is just not
possible. And a sad choice has to be made between being noble and practical.
Until people realize and fix the consequences of not spaying and not neutering and not taking proper care of their animals, the US will never be able to NOT spay and neuter.