Overview
Animal welfare concerns the physical and mental well-being of animals and the ethical, scientific, and practical questions that arise from how humans keep, use, and affect them. It is commonly understood through frameworks that consider an animal's nutrition, environment, health, behaviour, and affective states, often summarised as freedom from hunger and thirst, discomfort, pain, injury and disease, fear and distress, and the freedom to express normal behaviour. Welfare is assessed using indicators spanning physiology, health and disease status, behaviour, and, increasingly, measures intended to capture positive experiences rather than the mere absence of suffering. The field applies across many contexts, including farm and production animals, laboratory and research animals, companion animals, working animals, and wildlife in captivity and in the wild. In agriculture and veterinary science, welfare intersects with husbandry, housing, nutrition, disease prevention, and the control of zoonotic and production-limiting infections, since health is a fundamental component of well-being. In research, welfare is governed by ethical principles such as the replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal use and by the duty to minimise harm. Animal welfare therefore combines empirical science, which seeks objective measures of how animals fare, with ethics, which addresses human obligations toward sentient animals, informing policy, regulation, and standards of care.
Research published in this journal
5 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Evaluation of Inflammatory Serum Cytokines after Treatment with the Consciousness Energy Healing Based Proprietary Test Formulation on Combination of Cecal Slurry, LPS and E. Coli Induced Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS) in Sprague Dawley Rats
Monitoring Mast Cell Populations in Waldenström’s Macroglobulinemia: A Xenotransplantation Study
Ethics of Modern Stem Cell Research and Therapy: Current Critical and Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Effect of Coinfection by Fasciola hepatica and Mycobacterium bovis on Bovine Tuberculosis Immunodiagnosis in an Enzootic Area Hidalgo State, Mexico.
How this research is being cited
The 5 articles above have been cited 6 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2024 · Heliyon
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2024 · Abstract and Applied Analysis
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2024 · Heliyon
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2024 · Abstract and Applied Analysis
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2022 · Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
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2022 · Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Animal Welfare, linking to each citing work.