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Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery (2007) 9, 326e334

doi:10.1016/j.jfms.2007.01.011

Ethical issues in geriatric feline medicine


Bernard E Rollin PhD*

University Distinguished Professor, Most veterinarians hold a ‘pediatric’ rather than ‘garage mechanic’ view of their
Professor of Philosophy, Professor of function. In recent years, sophisticated medical modalities have allowed
Animal Sciences, Professor of veterinarians to keep animals alive, and increased value of companion animals
Biomedical Sciences and University in society has increased demand for such treatment. But whereas humans can
Bioethicist, Department of choose to trade current suffering for extended life, animals seem to lack the
Philosophy, Colorado State cognitive apparatus required to do so. Thus, veterinarians must guard against
University, Fort Collins, CO keeping a suffering animal alive for too long. Clients may be emotionally tied to
80523-1781, USA the animal and blind to its suffering. Part of the veterinarian’s role, therefore, is
to lead the client to ‘recollect’ quality of life issues. A second major role for the
veterinarian in treating geriatric or chronically ill animals is control of pain and
distress. Unfortunately, pain and distress have historically been neglected in
both human and veterinary medicine for ideological reasons. It is ethically
necessary to transcend this ideology which leads to both bad medicine and bad
ethics.
Date accepted: 31 January 2007 Ó 2007 ESFM and AAFP. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

A
t the beginning of his Republic, Plato between two ideal and extreme models for the
makes a profound point whose veracity veterinarian, the answers have almost univer-
has endured over the millennia. The sally favored one model. I pose to veterinarians
function of any craftsman, he affirmed (the what I have called The Fundamental Question
Greeks thought functionally, not mechanisti- of Veterinary Medical Ethics e does the veteri-
cally), is to improve the material he or she works narian owe primary allegiance to the client or
on, to enhance its value. Similarly, he argues, the to the animal (Rollin 2006c)? Are animals moral
function of a physician is to improve his or her objects in themselves, or are they of moral con-
patients, and of a shepherd to guard, protect, cern only as someone’s animals? Is the ideal model
nourish, preserve and improve the sheep under for the veterinarian the garage mechanic or the
his or her aegis. Any money such people earn pediatrician? If a person brings a car to a me-
is not essentially part of their function as crafts- chanic and the mechanic determines that the ve-
man, doctor, or shepherd, but accrues to them in hicle will cost $5000 to repair, it is perfectly
their conceptually separate capacity as a wage permissible for the owner to declare ‘Five thou-
earner. sand dollars? The hell with it! Junk it!’ On the
The same logic extends to veterinarians. Qua other hand, if a parent brings a child to a pediatri-
veterinarian, in one’s capacity of veterinarian, cian and the physician determines that the
one’s function is to advance e to better e the child needs $5000 worth of surgery, the pediatri-
health, well-being, and interests of the animals. cian certainly does not allow the parent to
And this insight is almost universally shared say, ‘To hell with the kid! Junk ’em! I can make
among the thousands of veterinarians I have another one’.
had the privilege of interacting with. In my experience of working with veterinar-
When I have asked my veterinarian audiences, ians all over the world for three decades, I have
be they companion animal practitioners, food found that well over 90% of veterinarians are
animal practitioners, laboratory animal practi- inclined toward the pediatrician model. Given
tioners, but most particularly the first, to choose the view of veterinarians as primarily obligated
to the well-being of animals, we can approach
*Tel: þ1-970-491-6885. E-mail: brollin@lamar.colostate.edu the matter at hand, namely the ethics of treating

1098-612X/07/040326+09 $32.00/0 Ó 2007 ESFM and AAFP. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Ethical issues in geriatric feline medicine 327

geriatric feline patients. Obviously, treating such (The public did not buy it!) Two thousand four
animals has always to some degree been a ques- hundred bills were promulgated in state legisla-
tion in veterinary medicine, but the answer was ture across the USA in 2004, dozens in the US
primarily dictated by the socioethical landscape Congress. Sweden and then the European Union
of society, the therapeutic armamentarium abolished confinement agriculture (‘factory
possessed by veterinary medicine and the ideo- farming’), as we know it in the USA, and such
logical outlook of veterinary medicine. By and unlikely people as the last two popes and Sena-
large, an animal lived until age rendered it tor Robert Byrd have condemned it publically.
dysfunctional, at which point it was euthanize. Cruelty has been elevated to a felony in over 40
In terms of animal comfort, little attention was states. Dozens of law schools teach animal law,
paid to palliative care e even control of pain e and legal scholars are working to elevate the le-
because knowledge of analgesia was virtually gal status of animals beyond property. Large
non-existent, and in any case a powerful battery movements exist aimed at raising the value of
of ideological presuppositions, which we shall companion animals above market value, or to
shortly discuss, strongly militated against atten- replace ‘ownership’ with ‘guardianship’ on
tion to felt pain, even if pain-mitigating modali- the model of human guardians. All of this
ties were available. activity e and much more e has been both cause
The issue of geriatric animals has today be- and effect of much greater social sensitivity to
come of singular importance for a number of animal suffering.
major reasons. In the first place, veterinary med- Let us examine some of these factors in finer
icine’s ability to treat chronic disease and to grain. Consider the exportation of heroic medicine
prolong life has increased exponentially, as evi- to animal medicine. As Dr Matt Sturmer wisely
denced by the proliferation of board-certified put it to me in conversation, ‘just because we can
practitioners in specialty practices. Animal on- do something doesn’t mean we should’. So: In to-
cology is a well-defined field; transplantation day’s cultural milieu, advances in human medi-
for animals is a reality; dialysis is a common oc- cine are transferred and appropriately modified
currence in sophisticated veterinary medical cen- to veterinary medicine, for example, in dialysis
ters. For the first time in medical history, or radiation therapy or transplantation. (Some-
veterinarians have a large number of modalities times, as in the case of limb-sparing treatment of
for prolonging life, analogous to what physicians osteosarcoma, developed at Colorado State Uni-
have. versity for dogs, veterinary medical advances
Second, the significance of companion animals have been exported to human medicine.) Human
for people’s lives has also increased exponen- medicine has been forced by public pressure to
tially e witness what we learned from Hurricane worry about quality of life as well as its prolonga-
Katrina, with people refusing rescue if they were tion. Indeed, the movement on behalf of voluntary
not allowed to take their pets, and recall the euthanasia, or choosing to die, is a direct result of
enormous outpouring of emotion on the part of society’s rejection of the medical concept that
people fortuitously reunited with their pets. more life, or prolongation of life, is justified at
Third, people are willing to put their money any cost to its quality. The hospice movement
where their mouth is and expend small fortunes also evidences increasing attention to quality of
on veterinary treatment. Even in the early 1980s, life when death is inevitable.
the Wall Street Journal covered Colorado State There is, however, a striking dissimilarity be-
University’s pioneering oncology program, mar- tween humans and animals facing life-threatening
veling in a front page story the willingness of illnesses, even as the tools of medicine dealing
owners to spend over six figures on cancer treat- with such crises converge in the two medical dis-
ment for their pets. ciplines (Rollin 2006a). Human cognition is such
Fourth, societal ethical concern for animals has that it can value long-term future goals and
skyrocketed since the 1970s. Legislation mandat- endure short-run negative experiences for the
ing the control of pain and suffering in animals sake of achieving them. Examples are plentiful.
used in research has been passed and imple- Many of us undergo voluntary food restriction,
mented all over the western world, including and the unpleasant experience attendant in its
the USA, despite vigorous opposition from the wake, for the sake of lowering blood pressure
research community, which included threatening or looking good in a bathing suit as summer
the public that researchers could not cure our approaches. We memorize volumes of boring
children if laboratory animal laws were passed. material for the sake of gaining admission to
328 BE Rollin

veterinary or medical school. We endure the ex- None of this is intended to denigrate animals
cruciating pain of cosmetic surgery to look better. or their minds; it is simply meant to mark
And we similarly endure chemotherapy, radia- a difference. The commonsensical truism that
tion, dialysis, physical therapy, and transplant animals think and feel was swept away by a sci-
surgeries to achieve a longer, better quality of entific revolt against 19th century excesses of an-
life than we would have without it or, in some thropomorphism of the sort that attributed
cases, merely to prolong life to see our children larcenous intentions to pack rats or conscious in-
graduate, complete an opus, or fulfill some other dustrious virtue to beavers. To assure the stabil-
goal. ity of belief in animal mind, we must be careful
In the case of animals, however, there is no ev- not to overemphasize its abilities, as when
idence, either empirical or conceptual, that they a woman I knew believed a dog could grasp
have the capability to weigh future benefits or the concept of its birthday celebration. To be
possibilities against current misery. To entertain sure, the dog could enjoy the treats and attention
the belief that ‘my current pain and distress, re- coming in the wake of the party, but that does
sulting from the nausea of chemotherapy or not mean that it could comprehend its birthday.
some highly invasive surgery, will be offset by To treat animals morally and with respect, we
the possibility of indefinite amount of future need to consider their mentational limits. Para-
time,’ is taken to be axiomatic of human think- mount in importance is the extreme unlikelihood
ing. But reflection reveals that such thinking that they can understand the concepts of life and
requires some complex cognitive machinery. death in themselves rather than the pains and
For example, one needs temporal and abstract pleasure associated with life or death. To the an-
concepts, such as possible future times and the imal mind, in a real sense there is only quality of
ability to compare them; a concept of death, elo- life, that is whether its experiential content is
quently defined by Heidigger as ‘grasping the pleasant or unpleasant in all of the modes it is
possibility of the impossibility of your being’; capable of, for example, whether they are bored
the ability to articulate possible suffering; and or occupied, fearful or not fearful, lonely or en-
so on. This, in turn, requires the ability to think joying companionship, painful or not, hungry
in an ifethen hypothetical and counterfactual or not, or thirsty or not. We have no reason to
mode, that is, if I do not do X, then Y will believe that an animal can grasp the notion of ex-
occur. This mode of thinking, in turn, seems to tended life, let alone choose to trade current suf-
necessitate or require the ability to possess sym- fering for it. The recent rise of the ‘pawspice’
bols and combine them according to rules of concept e hospice for animals e can accentuate
syntax, ie, requires language. this problem.
I have argued vigorously elsewhere against the This, in turn, entails that we realistically assess
Cartesian idea that animals lack thought and are what they are experiencing. We must remember,
simple robotic machines (Rollin 1989). I in fact for example, that an animal is its pain, for it is in-
wrote the federal animal research laws that forced capable of anticipating or even hoping for cessa-
acknowledgment of animal pain and distress tion of that pain. Thus, when we are confronted
(Rollin 1989). I strongly believe that animals enjoy with life-threatening illnesses that afflict our an-
a rich mental life. It is also clear that animals have imals, it is not axiomatic that they be treated at
some concept of enduring objects, causality, and whatever qualitative, experiential cost that may
limited futural possibilities, or else the dog would entail. The owner may consider the suffering
not expect to get fed, the cat would not await the a treatment modality entails a small price for ex-
mouse outside of its mouse hole, and the lion tra life, but the animal neither values nor com-
could not intercept the gazelle. Animals also prehends extra life, let alone the trade-off this
clearly display a full range of emotions, as Darwin entails. The owner, in turn, may ignore the differ-
famously argued. ence between the human and animal mind and
But it is also equally evident that an animal choose the possibilities of life prolongation at
cannot weigh being treated for cancer against any qualitative cost. It is at this point that the
the suffering it entails, cannot affirm a desire morally responsible veterinarian is thrust into
(or even conceive of a desire) to endure current his or her role as animal advocate, speaking for
suffering for the sake of future life, cannot under- what matters to the animals.
stand that current suffering may be counter- Dr Frank McMillan has reminded us that eu-
balanced by future life, and cannot choose to thanasia is not an end in itself, but rather a means
lose a limb to preclude metastases. to ending suffering (McMillan 2001). This was
Ethical issues in geriatric feline medicine 329

probably better understood by earlier genera- cats were very much analogous to livestock, ex-
tions, where the thought of heroic procedures cept that they were probably worth less.
to save animal life did not enter people’s minds, In the past 50 or so years, however, dogs and
nor was there technology available to pursue cats (and, to a lesser extent, other species) have
such modalities. But, with the contemporary become valued not only for the pragmatic, eco-
role of pets as friends, family members, and nomically quantifiable purposes just detailed,
emotional supporters for humans and the omni- but for deep emotional reasons as well. These an-
presence of veterinary modalities to replicate imals are viewed as members of the family, as
human medical innovations (for example, dialy- friends, as ‘givers and receivers of love’ as one
sis, transplantation, radiation therapy, and che- judge put it; and the bond based in pragmatic
motherapy), it is too easy to err in the wrong symbiosis has turned into a bond based in love.
direction. Whereas once a veterinarian needed This new basis for the bond imposes higher
to advocate for treatment of the treatable in the expectations on those party to such a bond on
face of financial or aesthetic reluctance (even to the analogy of how we feel we should relate to
this day, some owners need to be persuaded humans we are bound to by love and family. If
that a dog can function with three limbs), today a purely working animal is crippled and can no
a veterinarian must be vigilant against the owner longer tend to the sheep, it violates no moral
going too far, at the expense of the animal’s qual- canon’s (except, perhaps, loyalty) to affirm that
ity of life. he needs to be replaced by another healthy ani-
It appears on the surface paradoxical that peo- mal, and like livestock, may be euthanized if
ple who value their animals more than was ever the owner needs a functioning animal. (In prac-
done in history are inclined to go too far, in treat- tice, of course, people often kept the old animals
ment, and ignore the animal’s quality of life, but around for supererogatory or ‘sentimental’ rea-
it is actually quite understandable. To compre- sons, but, conceptually, keeping them alive and
hend this, we must recall the new role of com- cared for when they no longer could fulfill their
panion animals in people’s lives, which leads to function was not morally required any more
going too far. than was keeping a cow alive that could no lon-
Historically, the major human relationship ger give milk.)
with animals was in agriculture. The relation- But insofar as an animal is truly perceived as an
ship was based in pragmatism and mutual object of love or friendship, as companion animals
benefit. We kept these animals for practical pur- have come to be perceived in the past 50 years, or
poses; food, fiber, locomotion and power. And as a member of the family, a different set of moral
we treated them by and large well, for the sim- obligations are incurred. We do not euthanize or
ple reason that failing to do so reduced their adopt out (let alone relinquish) a crippled child
productivity. This was the basis of animal hus- or sick spouse or aged parent e at most we may
bandry, as celebrated in the 23rd Psalm, wherein institutionalize them if we are unable to provide
the Psalmist declares that we want no more the requisite care. A love-based bond imposes
from God than what the good shepherd pro- a higher and more stringent set of moral
vides to his sheep. obligations than does one based solely in mutual
The rise of a bond between humans and ani- pragmatic benefit.
mals, rooted not only in mutual symbiotic bene- The rise of deep love-based relationships with
fit, but also in something putatively more solid, animals as a regular and increasingly accepted
did not occur on a large scale until the 20th cen- social phenomenon came from a variety of con-
tury, with companion animals and the new sort verging and mutually reinforcing social condi-
of relationship we formed with them. While hu- tions. In the first place, probably beginning
mans have enjoyed symbiotic relationships with with the widespread use of the automobile, ex-
dogs and with cats for some 50,000 years, the tended nuclear families with multi-generations
bond was, as we saw was the case with agricul- living in one location or under one roof began
ture, one largely of mutual practical benefit. to vanish. At the beginning of the 20th century
Dogs were useful as guardians of flocks, alarms when roughly half of the public produced food
warning of intruders, hunting partners, pest for themselves and the other half of the public,
controllers, finders of lost people, hauler of significant numbers of large extended families
cats, finders and retrievers of game. Cats were lived together manning farms. The safety net
controllers of vermin and partners in battle. In for older people was their family, rather than
terms of mutual interdependence, dogs and society as a whole. The concept of easy mobility
330 BE Rollin

made preserving the nuclear family less of a ne- is custody of the children! An animal is someone
cessity, as did the rise of the new idea that society to hug, and hug you back; someone to play with,
as a whole rather than the family was responsi- to laugh with; to exercise with; to walk with; to
ble for assuring retirement, medical attention, share beautiful days; to cry with, to help weather
and facilities for elderly people. life’s crises. For a child, the animal is a playmate,
With the concentration of agriculture in fewer a friend; someone to talk to. My son’s first word
and fewer hands, the rise of industrialization, was ‘meow’.
and as the post-Depression Dust Bowl and World These companion animals then, in today’s
War II introduced migration to cities, the nuclear world, provide us with love and someone to
family notion was further eroded. The tendency love, and do so unfailingly, with loyalty, grace,
of urban life to erode community, to create and boundless devotion. In a book that should
what the Germans called ‘Gesellshaft’ rather be required reading for all who work with ani-
than ‘Gemeinschaft’, mixtures rather than com- mals, author Jon Katz has chronicled what he
pounds, as it were, further created solitude and calls the New Work of Dogs (Katz 2003), all based
loneliness as widespread modes of being. Correl- on his personal experiences in a New Jersey sub-
atively, as selfishness and self-actualization were urban community. Here we read of the dog
established as positive values beginning in whom a woman credits with shepherding her
highly individualistic 1960s, the divorce rate be- through a losing battle with cancer, as her emo-
gan to climb, and the traditional stigma attached tional bedrock. Katz tells of the ‘Divorced Wom-
to divorce was erased. As biomedicine pro- en’s Dog Club,’ a group of divorced women
longed our life spans, more and more people united only by divorce and reliance on their
significantly outlived their spouses, and were dogs. He tells the tale of a dog who provides
thrown into a loneliness mode of existence, an outlet for a ghetto youth’s insecurity and
with the loss of the extended family removing rage, and who is beaten daily. He relates the
a possible remedy. story of a successful executive with a family
In effect, we have lonely old people, lonely di- and friends, who in the end deals with stress in
vorced people, and most tragically, lonely chil- his life only by long walks with his Labrador,
dren whose single parent often works. With the totaling many hours in a day. While raising the
best jobs being urban, or quasi-urban, many peo- question of whether we are entitled to expect
ple live in cities or peripherally urban develop- this of our animals, Katz explains that we do,
ments such as condos. In New York City, for and that they perform heroically. The same
example, where I lived for 26 years, one can be book could have been e and should be e written
lonelier than in rural Wyoming. The cowboy about cats.
craving camaraderie can find a neighbor from Our pets have become sources of friendship
whom he is separated only by physical distance; and company for the old and the lonely, vehicles
the urban person may know no one, and have no for penetrating the frightful shell surrounding
one in striking distance who cares. Shorn of a disturbed child, beings that provide the comfort
physical space, people create psychic distances of touch even to the most asocial person, and in-
between themselves and others. People may exhaustible sources of pure, unqualified love.
(and usually do) for years live 6 inches away But, even as they meet their end of this emo-
from neighbors in apartment buildings and tionally based, non-economic bond, we fail
never exchange a sentence. Watch New Yorkers them. A divorced woman meets a man, falls in
on an elevator; the rule is stand as far away love, the animal hitherto so important to her is
from others as you can, and study the ceiling. abandoned. A child is born to a childless couple;
Making eye contact on a street can be taken as the animal is no longer needed as a child substi-
a challenge, or a sexual invitation, so people do tute, the former focus of attention is relegated to
not. One minds one’s own business, one steps background, and becomes an annoyance rather
over and around drunks on the street, ‘Don’t than a delight.
get involved’ is a mantra for survival. The putative paradox we described e owner
Yet humans need love, companionship, emo- insensitivity to animal suffering for the sake of
tional support, and need to be needed. In such prolonging the animal’s life, given the new im-
a world, a companion animal can be one’s psy- portance of animals to owners e is easily re-
chic and spiritual salvation. Divorce lawyers solved. Insofar as animals function emotionally
repeatedly tell me that custody of the pet can as members of the family and emotional sup-
be a greater source of conflict in a divorce than ports to people, people wish to prolong their
Ethical issues in geriatric feline medicine 331

lives at all costs, while failing to realize that life Quality of life considerations should be intro-
per se is not a goal for animals as it is for people. duced at the beginning of a veterinarianecliente
Thus, it is the veterinarians’ job, ever-increas- patient relationship, not suddenly sprung on
ingly, to prevent prolonged suffering, owners’ a client when treatment is over. In particular, it
hanging on too long, in an ironic reversal of the is useful to recall Plato’s dictum that, when deal-
historical tendency (which still endures in some ing with ethics and adults, it’s far better to re-
clients) to give up too quickly or euthanize the mind than to teach. For this reason, the client,
animals for convenience. (One of the great iro- who knows the animal better than the veterinar-
nies of veterinary practice is that a clinician ian, should be encouraged from the beginning to
may spend the morning persuading a client not help define quality of life for that animal. For ex-
to elect convenience euthanasia, and then the af- ample, I once adopted a huge, battered and
ternoon persuading another it is time to stop scarred junkyard dog who was enormously stoic
trying.) in nature. When he developed degenerative spi-
How does a veterinarian approach an intransi- nal myelopathy and was paralyzed in his hind
gent client such as the one described earlier, who limbs, I would come home five times a day to
insists on prolonging the animal’s agony as a re- move him around the lawn. I asked a veterinarian
sult of their own selfish needs and blindness to friend when it was appropriate to euthanize him.
the animal’s suffering? As the veterinarian He replied that the dog will tell you. The dog ate
must work through the client, his or her ability and drank, seemed to enjoy the sunshine, and
to function as an animal advocate is of para- gave no sign that his quality of life was nega-
mount importance, once again illustrating that tively balanced. As it happened, one of his favor-
veterinary medicine is as much or more of a ‘peo- ite games was catching a handball; offering it to
ple profession’ than human medicine. After all, my wife; and then, as she reached for it, snarling
a great human transplant surgeon can have no and growling like a werewolf, though eventually
personality at all, or a rotten personality e in allowing her to have the ball. He loved to repeat
spite of his or her personality, the demand for this routine. One day, he would not catch the
his or her services is inelastic. If the patient ball, would not pick it up, and would not offer
does not like the surgeon’s personality, he or it to my wife. A week later, he stopped eating
she is not likely to storm out, saying ‘I will go and drinking. It was only then I realized that
down the street.’ But a veterinarian’s role in he had indeed told me, but I was too ignorant
saving life or preventing suffering is four-square and selfish to listen.
tied to the veterinarian’s ability to serve as an ad- From the outset, I would then recommend
vocate without alienating the client. that the veterinarian obtain from the client
The best way to accomplish advocacy is to set a list as long as possible of what makes the an-
up the type of relationship with a client that has imal happy or unhappy and how the client
both agreeing to keep the best interests of the an- knows. This list, written down as part of the
imal in view as the paramount goal of treatment. medical record, can serve to remind the owners
In this way, the veterinarian can educate the cli- of their own criteria for quality of life at the
ent on the nature of animal mentation, suffering, point when treatment if failing and when wish-
and what matters to the animal. Such education ful thinking and essentially selfish desires may
should begin along with treatment, as should replace objectivity. I used this method with
the veterinarian’s claim for advocacy for animal a friend who asked me how to judge when it
quality of life. This is not to say that the veteri- was time for euthanasia and how to avoid com-
narian should unilaterally declare that the ani- promising his animal’s quality of life by overly
mal needs to die, but rather that he or she prolonging treatment. He later thanked me and
should engage the client in an ongoing dialog re- told me that, were it not for his own encoded
garding quality of life versus suffering. Nor notes defining the animal’s quality of life while
should the veterinarian ever forget the powerful it was still well, he would have rationalized try-
tool that is Aesculapean authority e the unique ing a variety of modalities that would have
authority vested in any healer e that allows greatly impaired the animal’s quality of life. Un-
a physician to scold or intimately probe even questionably, he said, that denial would have
an Adolph Hitler or a captain of industry (Rollin distorted his perception but for his own reflec-
2002). It is sometimes the case that veterinarians tive, codified deliberations on that animal’s
underestimate the degree to which they enjoy quality of life which, even in extremis, was im-
such authority. possible to ignore.
332 BE Rollin

In the end, such dialog, while awkward, diffi- McMillan have eloquently documented the unto-
cult, and emotional, can nevertheless benefit the ward effects of this attitude in veterinary medi-
animal, owner, and veterinarian’s own peace of cine (McMillan 1999). Thus, in essence, control
mind. of pain became increasingly irrelevant in scien-
Not all geriatric or even chronically ill animals, tific medicine, a tendency that unfortunately con-
however, require euthanasia. Herein lies the vet- tinues to this day.
erinarian’s second major role in reference to the The most dramatic and egregious example of
geriatric or chronically ill or injured animal e the supposed irrelevance of pain in the history
the focus on controlling pain, suffering, and dis- of human medicine is the failure to control pain
tress. Again recalling that animals do not value in 80% of human patients with cancer, even
extended life per se, we are morally obligated though 90% of such pain is controllable (Ferrell
to make sure that, while they live, they are not and Rhiner 1991). Equally horrifying is the fact
suffering. I have argued that animal suffering that, until the late 1980s, neonatal surgeons regu-
may well be worse than human suffering. After larly performed open heart surgery on newborns
all, a human in pain will realize that there are after administration of paralytic drugs and still
other modalities of pain control to try, or will perform a variety of procedures from colono-
realize the pain and suffering of radiation or che- scopy and setting broken limbs to bone marrow
motherapy or amputation is finite, and can look aspiration with the use of non-anesthetic, non-
forward to the cessation of pain. An animal, analgesic amnesiacs such as short-acting benzo-
however, lacking the conceptual apparatus to ar- diazepines (diazepam (Valium), midazolam
ticulate to itself possible futures, has nothing but (Versed, Dormicum)).
the pain, is the pain, has no hope. If human medicine was cavalier in dealing
Thus, a fundamental role for veterinary medi- with pain and suffering in its patients during
cine in society is finding modalities to control most of the 20th century (the term suffering
pain and suffering in our use of animals because does not even appear in medical dictionaries),
such control seems to be the main point of new this is even more true of veterinary medicine, be-
societal concern about animals and the ethic cause for most of the 20th century, society placed
and laws it has engendered. The track record of little moral value on control of animal pain.
veterinary medicine in this area is not good, Until the late 1960s, veterinary medicine was
however, particularly with cats. The reasons for overwhelmingly ancillary to agriculture, and
this neglect are worth detailing because rela- the veterinarian’s task was strictly dictated by
tively few veterinarians have actively thought the economic value of the animal; the control of
them through. pain was not of concern to producers and thus
First, in the 20th century, both human and vet- not expected of veterinary medicine. This atti-
erinary medicine became increasingly science tude is epitomized in Merillat’s (1906) veterinary
based, essentially perceived as applied biologic surgery textbook, in which he laments the almost
science, with physics and chemistry serving as total disregard of anesthesia in veterinary prac-
the exemplar of ideal science. In this light, em- tice, with the episodic exception of the canine
phasis on both the individual and idiosyncratic practitioner, whose clients presumably valued
aspects of a disease (what comprises the ‘art of their animals enough in non-economic terms to
medicine’) became subordinate to the universal demand anesthesia (Merillat 1906).
captured in medical science. Second, in keeping These practical considerations were further
with an ideological emphasis on science dealing compounded by the persistence of the Cartesian
only with what is testable and observable, talk of belief that possession of language is a precondi-
subjective states, such as pain and suffering, tion for the ability to feel pain, a notion that until
tended to disappear as unscientific (Rollin 1997, recently (2001) unequivocally existed in the In-
Rollin 2006b). Even psychology became the sci- ternational Pain Society’s definition of pain
ence of observable behavior. Third, physicians (Rollin 1999).
and veterinarians measured success by prolong- The denial of the experience of pain by ani-
ing life or function, focusing on quantity of life mals in veterinary medicine was so powerful
rather than quality of life, and emphasizing that when the first textbooks of veterinary anes-
cure rather than care because quality of life is thesia by Lumb (1963) and Lumb and Jones
difficult to measure and impossible to quantify. (1973) were published in the United States in
Pain became more of a concern to the patient 1963 and 1973, respectively, they did not list the
than to the clinician. Several articles by Frank control of felt pain as a reason for using
Ethical issues in geriatric feline medicine 333

anesthesia, and did not mention analgesia. When use analgesia. This is buttressed by a statement
I testified before Congress on behalf of our pro- made by the executive director of one large state
posed laboratory animal bill, I could only find veterinary association who expressed amaze-
two papers in a literature search on laboratory ment that so many veterinarians fail to supply
animal analgesia, one of which said that there pain control, even though it is easy to achieve,
ought to be papers (Rollin 1989, 2006). lucrative, and causes remarkable changes in the
Many veterinarians who are more than 40 or animals’ demeanor.
50 years of age still use the phrase chemical re- Finally, many veterinarians do not know
straint as synonymous with anesthesia; some a great deal about pain management. In a 1996
were trained in the 1960s to castrate horses using study, Dohoo and Dohoo showed that veterinar-
curariform (paralytic) drugs such as succinylcho- ians’ knowledge is quite limited and that what
line, which not only do not mask or diminish practitioners do know is typically not acquired
pain but probably intensify it by the fear they in veterinary school (Dohoo and Dohoo 1996),
create. Others erroneously speak of anesthesia although I suspect that this is rapidly changing
as sedation, although most sedatives neither as society increases its demand for pain control
mask nor diminish pain. Until very recently, ket- in animals.
amine alone was used for cat spay and neuter, If we keep our companion animals to give and
despite the fact the ketamine is not viscerally receive love, as members of our families, we
analgesic on its own. Furthermore, veterinary have an insurmountable obligation to not let
medicine has yet to address the fact that animals them suffer. Equally important, it is now defi-
receiving ketamine may experience both ‘bad nitely known that uncontrolled pain is not only
trips’ and flashbacks. morally problematic when allowed to persist in
Of equal concern are the ideological rationali- humans or animals, it is biologically deleterious.
zations still invoked by some (particularly older) Unmitigated pain is a major biologic stressor and
veterinarians to justify withholding post-surgical affects numerous aspects of physical health, from
or post-traumatic analgesia from animals. These wound healing to resistance to infectious disease.
rationalizations include the belief that anesthesia The conclusion is inescapable; uncontrolled pain
is more stressful than the surgical procedure per- damages health and well-being and can even, if
formed without anesthesia. Also, post-surgical pain is severe enough, engender death. Ironi-
analgesics are not needed because animals sup- cally, the new edition of Lumb and Jones’s veter-
posedly will eat immediately after surgery. Anal- inary textbook stresses this dimension of pain
gesics are not to be used because without the management, a major salubrious change since
pain, the animal will inexorably reinjure the the publication of the 1970s edition (Lumb and
damaged body part. (This is far more true of Jones 1973). Indeed, as federal laboratory animal
humans than of animals.) Post-surgical howling laws recognize, pain control is not enough e we
and whining are not signs of pain; they are after- must also manage distress, such as nausea, bore-
effects of anesthesia. Anatomic differences, such dom, loneliness, deprivation of love and stimula-
as the presence of an anatomic mesenteric sling, tion in an ICU, neglect, etc.
vitiate the need for pain control after abdominal One of the unexpected consequences of ignor-
surgery in the cat. Animals do not need post- ing pain and suffering in human and animal
surgical analgesia because we can watch them medicine in the 20th century has been the fueling
behave normally after surgery. Young animals of the development of alternative, non-evidence-
feel less pain than older ones and thus do not based, non-scientific ‘therapies’. To put it
need surgical anesthesia for procedures such as crudely, patients and animal owners have rea-
tail docking or castration, which are performed soned that if doctors do not worry about human
with ‘bruticaine.’ Analgesia deadens the coping or animal suffering, they will find others who
ability of predators and thus is more discomfit- will. Many alternative practitioners do approach
ing to an animal than the pain is. Liver biopsies human and animal patients with empathy and
do not hurt, and so on. understanding of the full significance of pain
Although adequate, even definitive, responses and suffering. Unfortunately, however, compas-
to this spurious reasoning exist, these rationali- sion is not cure and is only part of care. Recogni-
zations persist as barriers to pain management. tion that a being is suffering is not alleviation of
One drug company executive has even told me that suffering, although it is surely a necessary
that, by the company’s reckoning, approximately condition for such alleviation. If veterinary cli-
one-third of veterinarians do not and would not ents are drawn to alternative unproven therapies
334 BE Rollin

that may be fueled by compassion but do not pain and distress, and their alleviation. The role
work to control pain, the animal may be cheated of the contemporary veterinarian is, ever-increas-
of a proven modality for pain control, creating an ingly, assuring a decent quality or life and the
intolerable moral situation for the animal owner absence of suffering at the end of life. Insofar
and a loss of credibility for veterinarians because as it appears that an animal judges its life by
clients may not be able to judge when pain is (or its ‘nows’, we must assure that the final series
is not) alleviated. If veterinarians will not man- of ‘nows’, are not filled with pain, distress, and
age pain, they also risk a grave loss of credibility suffering.
among the public, who may then seek to remove
the special status of scientifically-based veteri-
nary medicine and open animal medicine to the
forces of the free market, at an incalculable cost References
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fear death, lacking after all the concepts to under- Veterinary Journal 37 (a), 546e551.
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stand, in Heidegger’s masterful phrase, ‘the pos- in cancer pain management for the 1990s. Journal of Clini-
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(There is reason to believe that humans also fear Lumb WV (1963) Small Animal Anesthesia. Philadelphia: Lea
and Febiger.
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with no absurd fears that they will become ad- health in animals. Journal of the American Veterinary Medi-
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McMillan FD (2001) Rethinking euthanasia: death as an
much as they do and would die with far more dig- unintentional outcome. Journal of the American Veterinary
nity, as the hospice movement has shown.) It is Medicine Association 219, 1204e1206.
thus reasonable to say of animals that letting Merillat LA (1906) Principles of Veterinary Surgery. Chicago:
them live in unalleviated pain and distress is the Alexander Eger.
worst thing we can do to them. If the veterinar- Rollin BE (1989) The Unheeded Cry: Animal Consciousness,
Animal Pain and Science. New York: Oxford University
ian’s raison d’etre is, as is so often remarked, the Press.
health and well-being of the animals in his or Rollin BE (1997) Pain and ideology in human and veterinary
her care, then the assiduous pursuit of eliminat- medicine. Seminars in Veterinary Medicine and Surgery
ing or at least managing pain and suffering (small animal) Pain 12 (2), 56e61.
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current views of pain. Pain Forum 8 (2), 78e83.
has not been so in the past only makes it all the Rollin BE (2002) The use and abuse of Aesculapian authority
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It is incumbent, therefore, on veterinarians to Medicine Association 220, 1144e1149.
learn much more about the behavior of their pa- Rollin BE (2006a) Euthanasia and quality of life. Journal of
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by no means as anthropomorphic as canine, Rollin BE (2006b) Science and Ethics. New York: Cambridge.
and teach their clients. In particular, we need to Rollin BE (2006c) Veterinary Medical Ethics: Theory and Cases.
know more and teach more regarding signs of (2nd edn). Ames, IA: Blackwell, 27e29.

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