Making the Case for Multi-Axis Assessment of Behavioural Problems
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Behaviour is a complex construct that is resistant to classification using discrete labels.
- There is an ongoing debate about whether behaviour problems should be considered normal adaptive responses or dysfunctional conditions.
- There are discrepancies between authors on the nature, associated risk factors, and clinical presentation of many behaviour problems.
- Behaviour:This axis would include all the details of the problem behaviour, which could be used to form a descriptive diagnosis.
- Traits:This axis would include information about behavioural, temperamental, and personality traits (which can be considered to be transdiagnostic characteristics), that have been derived from the behavioural history and from relevant psychometric tools or behaviour tests.
- Health:This axis would include a review of the animal’s past and current health, to evaluate the contribution to the animal’s behaviour.
- Environment:This axis would cover the animal’s environment and its contribution to the animal’s behaviour.
- Functioning:This axis would include information about the animal’s ability to function, in terms of its own welfare, its function as a pet, and its potential impact on society. This includes the bidirectional relationship between the behaviour problem on the quality of life of the pet and the family.
2. The 5-Axis Model
2.1. Axis 1: Behaviour
- The complete behavioural sequence in a wide range of incidents of the problem behaviour.
- The targets, contexts and triggering stimuli, events and interactions for the behaviour.
- The animal’s emotional state, before, during and after incidents.
- The animal’s level of awareness (which relates to its alertness, attention, and visuospatial functioning), during incidents.
- Signaling used by the animal before, during, and after an incident.
- Indications of the motivation or goals of the behaviour.
- The owner’s reaction to the behaviour.
- The evolution of the pattern of behaviour over time.
- Significant events in the animal’s history (developmental environment, relinquishment).
- Information about bite severity (where relevant).
- Fully characterise the behaviour and its evolution over time.
- Assess the predictability of the behaviour.
- Make an initial risk assessment.
- Provide information that is required for an assessment of Axis 2 (the evaluation of traits).
2.2. Axis 2: Traits
- Informal evaluation of traits, versus states, using information from the behavioural history collected in Axis 1.
- Detection and quantification of traits using psychometric or behavioural testing tools.
2.3. Axis 3: Health
- A behaviour problem is the presenting complaint and a medical condition is subsequently identified as one of the contributory factors.
- A medical condition has presenting signs that are primarily behavioural (e.g., cognitive dysfunction, focal epilepsy, feline hyperesthesia syndrome).
- A medical condition is the presenting problem, but it could be partially caused by behaviour-related factors, including stress and certain behavioural traits. An example is the relationship between environmental stress and individual vulnerability to stress, and the occurrence of idiopathic cystitis in cats [21].
- The animal has known health problems, but are they relevant to its current problem behaviour?
- The animal is receiving medication, supplements, nutraceuticals or a specialist diet, but are the effects, or adverse effects, of those biological therapies relevant to its current problem behaviour?
- The animal has no known health problems, but what level of suspicion is there that the current problem behaviour may be related to one or more undetected health problems?
- The animal has no known health problems, but is not in optimum health. Is that a contributory factor to the current behaviour, or an indication of other lifestyle factors that could be important?
- Altering motivation (e.g., sickness behaviour, painful conditions, altered hunger, or thirst).
- Producing acute sensations that can alter behaviour (painful conditions, epilepsy).
- Causing functional impairment to sensory systems (e.g., touch, vision, or hearing).
- Causing functional impairment of the central nervous system, leading to perceptual, emotional, or cognitive impairment (e.g., brain tumour, cognitive dysfunction, epilepsy, hypothyroidism, or diabetes mellitus).
- Deficit effects are characterised by a decrease in certain behaviours, such as activity, alertness, social interaction, feeding, and play.
- Productive effects are characterised by an increase in the expression of behaviours that were previously expressed at a lower level, and the appearance of behaviours that were previously absent. For example, activity, aggression, inappropriate elimination, eating, and self-mutilation.
- In cases where it is difficult to establish a link between environmental cues and the behaviour of the animal.
- When the first signs of behavioural problem are seen in adulthood.
- If the patient is middle aged or older, they are more likely to have a physical condition.
- A period of sub-optimal health precedes the behavioural signs.
- There are neurological signs.
- There are signs of weight loss.
- There are heritable disorders in the animal’s family, line, or breed.
- There have been signs of changing level of consciousness or awareness, or other signs of mental impairment.
- There are some physical signs that are indicative of serious physical disease (fever, abdominal swelling, oedema, jaundice, and pain).
- Behavioural signs do not resolve, despite appropriate treatment.
- There is evidence of generally worsening physical health (e.g., exercise intolerance).
- The absence, or reduced expression, of species-typical behaviours, such as exploration, play, social interaction, or locomotion (e.g., climbing or jumping), particularly when there has been a change.
2.4. Axis 4: Environment
- The quality of the physical environment.
- The quality of the social environment.
- Predictability and control, from the animal’s perspective.
- The individual’s preparedness for, and ability to utilise, the environment (which may relate to the individual’s temperament, state of health, and previous environmental experience).
- How well the animal’s current environment, satisfies the needs outlined in the relevant welfare code for that species.
- How well the animal’s current environment provides suitable opportunities for the animal to manage its own negative emotions and stress (e.g., places to withdraw to, in order to avoid fear or conflict).
2.5. Axis 5: Functioning
2.6. The Animal’s Quality of Life
- A good life: The balance between positive and negative experiences and affective states is clearly positive.
- A life worth living: The net balance between positive and negative experiences and affective states is still satisfactory, but less so.
- A point of balance: Positive and negative experiences and affective states are equally balanced.
- A life worth avoiding: The balance between positive and negative experiences and affective states starts to be unfavourable.
- A life not worth living: The balance between positive and negative experiences and affective states is strongly unfavourable.
- By increasing the likelihood of punishment.
- By damaging the secure-base relationship.
- By imposing restrictions on the physical environment; for example, dogs that exhibit destructive behaviour are often confined to certain areas of the house.
- By limiting opportunities to explore the environment and to interact with people and other animals; for example, problems of aggression often result in confinement and/or on the application of restraint methods during walks.
- By increasing the risk of relinquishment and euthanasia; for example, behaviour problems are known to be the most common reason for owners to surrender their dogs to shelters [46].
2.7. The Family’s Quality of Life
3. Discussion and Conclusions
- Transdiagnostic mechanisms are likely to be shared between species: Developments in human mental health could therefore enable us to identify treatable features of behavioural problems that we are currently unaware of.
- New biological tests and therapies for human mental health problems will target transdiagnostic mechanisms: If we work in parallel with current developments in human mental health, and adopt a similar theoretical framework, it will be easier to make rational use of those new tests and therapies.
- Veterinary behavioural problems such as compulsive disorder, phobia, anxiety, and aggression, share common characteristics with human conditions: They offer excellent opportunities for research funding within the RDoC framework.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Endocrine Condition | Psychiatric Symptoms (Human) |
---|---|
Hyperadrenocorticism | Anxiety, Panic disorders, Irritability, Mania, Hypomania, Poor self-image hypercortisolism irritability, Distress, Mood disorders, Depression. |
Type 1 Diabetes | Depression, Psychomotor agitation, Sleeping difficulty, Eating disorders. |
Type 2 Diabetes | Depression, Eating disorders, Poor self-image. |
Hyperthyroidism | Anxiety, Irritability, Mania, Hypomania, Psychosis, Insomnia, Attention and Overactivity problems, Depression, Restlessness, Fatigue, and Delirium. |
Hypothyroidism | Delusions, hallucinations, attention deficits and cognitive disturbances. |
Pheochromocytoma | Anxiety, Panic disorders, Tremulousness. |
Hypoparathyroidism | Depression. |
Androgens | Increased aggression, Anger, Acting out, Dominant behaviour, Antisocial behaviour. |
Domain | Constructs | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Negative valence systems | Acute threat (fear) | Potential threat (anxiety) | Sustained threat | Loss | Frustrative nonreward | |
Positive valence systems | Reward responsiveness | Reward learning | Reward valuation | |||
Cognitive systems | Attention | Perception | Declarative memory | Language | Cognitive control | Working memory |
Social processes | Affiliation and attachment | Social communication | Perception and understanding of self | Perception and understanding of others | ||
Arousal and regulatory systems | Arousal | Circadian rhythms | Sleep and wakefulness | |||
Sensorimotor systems. | Motor actions | Agency and ownership | Habit | Innate motor patterns |
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Fatjó, J.; Bowen, J. Making the Case for Multi-Axis Assessment of Behavioural Problems. Animals 2020, 10, 383. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10030383
Fatjó J, Bowen J. Making the Case for Multi-Axis Assessment of Behavioural Problems. Animals. 2020; 10(3):383. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10030383
Chicago/Turabian StyleFatjó, Jaume, and Jonathan Bowen. 2020. "Making the Case for Multi-Axis Assessment of Behavioural Problems" Animals 10, no. 3: 383. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10030383
APA StyleFatjó, J., & Bowen, J. (2020). Making the Case for Multi-Axis Assessment of Behavioural Problems. Animals, 10(3), 383. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10030383