ABSTRACT
The animal sheltering industry lacks standardized methods of data collection and analysis. The resulting lack of available data limits our understanding of the homeless animal population. The objective of this study was to better understand record-keeping practices and attitudes toward shelter statistics among Massachusetts shelter and rescue organizations and to identify barriers to data collection and analysis. A survey of 119 participants at Massachusetts sheltering organizations revealed that the animal welfare community held favorable attitudes toward data management and sharing, but desired additional resources and training to manage data more efficiently and effectively. While a large proportion of homeless dogs and cats in Massachusetts are handled by a small number of large organizations, there are also hundreds of smaller shelters, rescues and animal control officers in the system. Public agencies were the least likely to use electronic data-keeping means, and often cited lack of resources as a barrier. These results should prove useful not only in Massachusetts but for other regions hoping to improve data collection practices and for the evaluation of shelter statistics systems nationwide.
Acknowledgments
Members of the Massachusetts Animal Coalition, Inc.’s Shelter Statistics Task Force are Joann Lindenmayer DVM, MPH, (Chair), Richard Panofsky PhD, Alice O’Connor, Anne Lindsay MA, Emily McCobb DVM MS, and Seana Dowling-Guyer MS. The authors are grateful to the following individuals for their contributions:
Lauren Gilfeather MSW (Mass Animal Health), Sheri Gustafson (Mass Animal Fund), Kara Holmquist JD (MSPCA), Margaret Slater DVM PhD (ASPCA), Jean Weber (MSPCA), and Massachusetts Animal Coalition board members.