In
. Wiley. pp. 1-14 (
2019)
Copy
BIBTEX
Abstract
The field of veterinary ethics deals with the moral responsibilities and ideals of veterinarians in their capacity of providers of medical care for animals and as members of the veterinary profession when the profession speaks on issues relating to the use, treatment, and medical care of animals. For veterinarians, the professional role characteristically involves serving – at the same time – two parties or stakeholders with potentially conflicting interests: an animal that receives veterinary care and a human who owns the animal and pays for this care. Because it can be difficult, and is sometimes impossible, for veterinarians to serve the interests of both their animal and human masters, hard ethical choices must be made. These choices can be complicated by the fact that there are disagreements about the value and importance of animals, and thus about how much the interests of veterinary patients should count in the first place. Veterinary ethics faces issues of great variety, in part because there are different kinds of veterinary practice, which raise different ethical questions.