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Henry BrownFeature Article

The Welfare of Cattle and the
"Five Freedoms"

FREEDOM FROM HUNGER AND THIRST
 

FREEDOM FROM DISCOMFORT
 

FREEDOM FROM PAIN, INJURY OR DISEASE
 

FREEDOM TO EXPRESS NORMAL BEHAVIOUR
 

FREEDOM FROM FEAR
AND DISTRESS
 

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in-depth description



 

The Best for Bovine
What are the UK guidelines?

That steak on your plate graduated from Bovine University. To attain a degree, it is imperative that students live a life of misery. On the big day, during the graduation ceremony, they are stunned, skinned, hung upside down, and bled to death. How nice. Who looks after them?

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) and the Farm Animal Welfare Council (FAWC) are the two leading independent advisory boards established by the government in the UK to monitor and ensure high standards of animal health and welfare. It is their duty to advise and give recommendations to the Government any changes that are necessary through the use of Welfare Codes.

The existing code for Cattle, published in 1983, will be replaced in early 2003. The new code, which will implement a few hundred new recommendations, serves the purpose of encouraging all those who care for cattle to adopt the highest standards of husbandry. Through the use of a set of firm propositions, known as the “Five Freedoms”, a core structure is defined regarding an animal’s basic needs and implies ideal states rather than standards which promote good animal welfare.

How do these codes work? How are they enforced? Nick Shearman of DEFRA explains.
How do two Vets feel about how their patients are treated?
 
Copyright © 2002-2003
 
The word on the street...
Q: Do you take animal welfare into consideration when purchasing meat?
 
absolutely...
i buy organic...
only free range...
in Highbury, I...
since BSE...
only organic!...
 
Q: Do you think animal welfare is taken seriously in the UK?
 
I dont think so...
got money...
an awareness...
people are selfish...
most don't...