Impact of observation duration on behavioural pain assessment and intra-observer reliability in castrated piglets: A pilot study
Rubia M Tomacheuski, Pedro HE Trindade, Victoria R Merenda, Magdiel Lopez-Soriano, Monique Pairis-Garcia

TL;DR
This pilot study found that watching videos of piglets is a reliable way to assess pain, even after long observation periods.
Contribution
The study introduces a non-invasive video-based method for pain assessment in piglets with high intra-observer reliability.
Findings
No differences in UPAPS scores for piglets in pain across observation times.
Higher UPAPS scores in control group at mid-point, but no item differences.
Intra-observer reliability was 'very good' for UPAPS total scores.
Abstract
Pain monitoring and diagnosis are crucial in seeking to improve animal welfare. This pilot study aimed to investigate the impact of long hours observation on pain assessment and the intra-observer reliability in piglets using video recording. A total of ten piglets, five from the control group (sham castration; pain-free) and five from the pain group (surgical castration; pain-state), were video-recorded immediately post-castration. The videos were randomised and assessed by an experienced observer using the Unesp-Botucatu Pig Composite Acute Pain Scale (UPAPS). The same ten videos were watched at three different times (trial initiation, half-way point, trial termination) with a four-week interval between them. During the four-week interval periods, the observer watched an additional 360 videos from another study to simulate long observation periods. For the pain group, no differences…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Behavior and Welfare Studies · Human-Animal Interaction Studies · Meat and Animal Product Quality
