The University of Sydney is launching a world-first app that will not only help owners help their dogs be happier and healthier, but could also play a life-saving role by teaching young dogs to behave better - thereby reducing the chances of pups falling victim to what are currently their top killers.
Professor McGreevy is the author of A Modern Dog's Life: How to Do the Best for Your Dog. This YouTube video was published in 2010.
Dogs can easily be socialised so they do not display common behavioural problems that relate to anxiety.
Research from the UK has revealed the leading cause of death in dogs under the age of three relate to behavioural problems 鈥 being abandoned or euthanased because they display unwelcome behaviour and being involved in car accidents.*
Doglogbook has been designed by animal welfare scientists in the to be a dog鈥檚 new best friend, helping ensure optimum quality of life and happiness 鈥 from puppyhood through to old age to assist with difficult end-of-life decisions.
The free app draws on the University of Sydney鈥檚 new science of 鈥樷 鈥 a term coined by in the . Doglogbook features tonight in the final instalment of a two-part series on ABC TV鈥檚 , which not only officially launches the app but also reveals whether three owners have been able to transform their dogs鈥 behaviour in just two weeks, using dogmanship.
Professor McGreevy said: 鈥淒ogs can easily be socialised so they do not display the common behavioural problems that relate to anxiety 鈥 which is where the doglogbook comes in.鈥
Mia Cobb, a canine scientist who was part of the expert doglogbook development team, said it was hoped these combined features would help owners become more mindful of their dogs鈥 overall happiness and wellbeing.
鈥淒oglogbook may also help take some of the pressure off owners in identifying and acknowledging decline as dogs near the end of life,鈥 Ms Cobb said.
There is also a working-dog channel that logs training investment and tracks assessment outcomes, as well as assisting in the health management of dogs working in roles as diverse as scent detection, guide/seeing eye, livestock herding, guard/protection dogs, and racing greyhounds.
Doglogbook has been funded in part by the Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching, the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation and Meat and Livestock Australia.
The app has the support of the Working Kelpie Council of Australia, the at the University of Sydney and was developed in collaboration with the Australian Working Dog Alliance and SmartSports.
Doglogbook information could eventually feed into , the national opt-in pet surveillance system for vets . Data from VetCompass, which was first trialled in the United Kingdom by Professor McGreevy and colleagues almost a decade ago, shows the main killers of dogs under three years of age both relate to behavioural problems 鈥 being abandoned or euthanased because they display unwelcome behaviour and being involved in car accidents.
is available online and is free to download from iTunes and Google App stores.
You can read about the dogmanship projects including doglogbook via the new dogmanship website dedicated to this area of work聽
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