‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood

This paper demonstrates the relevance of animals to medical sociology by arguing that pet owners’ accounts of veterinary decision-making can highlight key sociological themes which have important relevance to both human and animal health. Based on semi-structured interviews, the paper argues that in...

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Main Authors: Ashall, Vanessa, Hobson-West, Pru
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38634/
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author Ashall, Vanessa
Hobson-West, Pru
author_facet Ashall, Vanessa
Hobson-West, Pru
author_sort Ashall, Vanessa
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper demonstrates the relevance of animals to medical sociology by arguing that pet owners’ accounts of veterinary decision-making can highlight key sociological themes which have important relevance to both human and animal health. Based on semi-structured interviews, the paper argues that interspecies ‘kinship’ allows for the extension of sociological claims regarding altruism, self-interest and mutuality from human blood donation to companion animal blood ‘donors’. Furthermore, this study extends sociological understanding of the human-animal bond by showing how the dog’s status as kin meant they were expected to donate blood, and that the act of donation itself represents an important opportunity for family ‘display’. However, owners who do not or cannot donate blood themselves describe pet blood donation as an opportunity to lessen associated feelings of guilt or obligation through ‘doing good by proxy’. These findings raise critical sociological and ethical questions concerning the risks and benefits of donation, and for how we understand third-party decision making. Finally, the paper argues for the close entanglement of human and animal health, and concludes that sociologists of health and medicine should explore the radical possibility that decision-making in healthcare more generally might be influenced by experiences at the veterinary clinic, and vice versa.
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spelling nottingham-386342020-05-04T18:35:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38634/ ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood Ashall, Vanessa Hobson-West, Pru This paper demonstrates the relevance of animals to medical sociology by arguing that pet owners’ accounts of veterinary decision-making can highlight key sociological themes which have important relevance to both human and animal health. Based on semi-structured interviews, the paper argues that interspecies ‘kinship’ allows for the extension of sociological claims regarding altruism, self-interest and mutuality from human blood donation to companion animal blood ‘donors’. Furthermore, this study extends sociological understanding of the human-animal bond by showing how the dog’s status as kin meant they were expected to donate blood, and that the act of donation itself represents an important opportunity for family ‘display’. However, owners who do not or cannot donate blood themselves describe pet blood donation as an opportunity to lessen associated feelings of guilt or obligation through ‘doing good by proxy’. These findings raise critical sociological and ethical questions concerning the risks and benefits of donation, and for how we understand third-party decision making. Finally, the paper argues for the close entanglement of human and animal health, and concludes that sociologists of health and medicine should explore the radical possibility that decision-making in healthcare more generally might be influenced by experiences at the veterinary clinic, and vice versa. Wiley 2017-02-06 Article PeerReviewed Ashall, Vanessa and Hobson-West, Pru (2017) ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood. Sociology of Health and Illness, 39 (6). pp. 908-922. ISSN 1467-9566 blood donor pets companion animals veterinary human-animal relations kinship http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1467-9566.12534/abstract doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12534 doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12534
spellingShingle blood donor
pets
companion animals
veterinary
human-animal relations
kinship
Ashall, Vanessa
Hobson-West, Pru
‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title_full ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title_fullStr ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title_full_unstemmed ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title_short ‘Doing good by proxy’: Human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
title_sort ‘doing good by proxy’: human-animal kinship and the ‘donation’ of canine blood
topic blood donor
pets
companion animals
veterinary
human-animal relations
kinship
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38634/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38634/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38634/