Should I be a vegetarian?

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Meat is Murder
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Vegetarianism can be quite the controversial topic, with many people choosing not to eat meat or particular types of meat for varying reasons – be that moral, financial or simply down to taste and preference.

But how should I stand on the matter, from the point of view of a vet student?

While on EMS, I’ve been met with differing opinions. At my lambing placement, the farmer’s mother just could not understand why anyone would be vegetarian and believed that we especially – as future vets – should not even entertain the idea. In stark contrast, the farmer and his family at my dairy placement were quite surprised when I told them that I eat all types of meat, and claimed that every previous vet student they’d had was vegetarian.

These views may simply arise from generation differences, with older generations still firmly sticking to the “you get what you’re given” attitude. But is it more than that? Are we, as vet students, expected to have an opinion one way or the other?

Vet in abattoir
©iStockphoto.com/alle12

Vets contribute massively to the meat industry; they need to be present in abattoirs, and the aim of farm vets is to keep the industry going. On a day-to-day basis the farm vet is likely to undertake routine tasks (TB testing, pregnancy diagnosis or the occasional caesarian or surgical correction of a displaced abomasum), but if you look at the bigger picture, these all contribute to helping the meat and dairy industries run smoothly. The farm vet also plays a vital role in advising on improving production and maintaining high welfare standards in order to produce the optimum quality and quantities of meat.

So, if a farm vet spends their life oiling the cogs in the meat industry, surely it’s entirely counter productive to be vegetarian?

Of course, there is the moral argument against using animals for meat. But, as ambassadors for animal welfare, should vets sit on this side of the fence?

There is the opinion that any type of farming instigates cruelty and unnatural methods of some degree, and that, as vets, we should not stand for this. Dedicated to ensuring good welfare of all species, we, of all people, cannot turn a blind eye because we are faced with the reality of what goes on behind the scenes of the meat industry.

But we are not vets yet. And how much of the “student” in us dictates our diet, whether we like it or not? The hard truth is that meat is expensive to the average student, and a lot of us subconsciously undertake the decision to eat very little meat purely due to finances.

Is this how vets should be expected to think?

While I respect other people’s decisions to become vegetarian, I could never do it. Since we have a pig farm in the family, meat eating has always been a way of life, not a choice – not that I genuinely think I’d be forced to eat meat if I didn’t want to, but vegetarianism is just “not done” in our family (and I always get packed off to uni with enough home-produce to last me the semester).

As for seeing “behind the scenes” of the meat industry, I have very strong opinions on farming, and the reasoning behind methods and techniques that may be deemed as “cruel” to the outsider. These views stem from my farming background, and the ignorance of non-farming folk often frustrates me.

While vets have a much deeper insight into the meat industry than the general public, I’m not convinced that this has a particular effect on our choice in being vegetarian or not – and I don’t think being a vet student changes your opinion in one direction or the other.

However, I do believe that if someone genuinely had very strong objections towards the meat industry, they would find a veterinary course very difficult to handle morally. Even if you’re set on purely becoming a small animal vet, we all get immersed in the meat industry to some extent.


Comments

2 responses to “Should I be a vegetarian?”

  1. Sophie Avatar
    Sophie

    I think this is sad. These animals have no voice. They are imprisoned by us and live their whole lives for our use. They are sentient beings with feelings and instincts, every one of them an individual. How would you like the life of a farm animal today? What gives us the right to take their lives away from them? I know it’s not easy to be real and honest but if vets can’t tell the truth of the horrors and expose the disgusting meat industry, they are hypocrites. For horrors to happen and nobody to say anything. You are guilty of turning away from a moral duty to create a better world.

  2. I’m an RCVS registered veterinary nurse & throughout my twelve years in the industry I have always been vegetarian & later vegan. I have always worked in small animal practice & never been involved in farm practice on principle but I do have sufficient knowledge of it. Although this article was written a few years ago, I have had similar conversations with vet students & I find it worrying that tradition is always used as a reason for continuing current farming practices. New generations of vet students should embrace change not cling to old ideas & practices.

    Firstly, this article is horribly biased due to the author being from a farming background who doesn’t even consider vegetarianism as an option. The article only momentarily touches upon animal welfare as a moral obligation for vets & dismisses it quickly within one sentence without a second thought. How can it not be a moral concern for the people who are directly responsible for animal welfare? I find it worrying the author doesn’t even stop to consider the dilemma properly. I suspect things were different in 2014 but in the present day veganism is the fastest growing lifestyle & justice movement. Surely this cannot be ignored.

    Vets do experience the farming & meat industry first hand (especially during their training) so surely it is their responsibility as animal advocates to point out what is wrong & instigate change. Not just blindly support it because that’s what vets do or that’s how it has always been done. I personally believe in the complete abolition of the animal farming industry but common sense dictates that this will not happen overnight so welfare standards must be raised in the meantime & vets I believe are directly responsible for this. If not them, then who?

    Vets & nurses go into this industry because we love & want to help animals. If we value animals like cats & dogs, why not value cows, pigs & sheep etc in exactly the same way. Not as products, commodities or stock but as individuals who don’t want to die (I’m sure anyone who has visited a slaughterhouse can attest to this). Pigs are more intelligent than dogs & as intelligent as three year old human child. Dairy cows feel emotional pain when their babies are removed so humans can harvest their milk. Chickens can be trained to do tricks. Their sentience & intelligence should be recognised, not suppressed & ignored for convenience.

    The author also talks about standard farm practices that are ‘deemed cruel to the outsider’ but if a procedure wouldn’t be carried out on a dog or cat without anaesthetic by law, why should it be done to any other animal? All animals suffer & feel pain as we well know, but why is this disregarded with farm animals? Why is it accepted standard practice to inflict pain? Because pain relief & anaesthesia are inefficient & expensive? When animals become seen as commodities, these are the views that prevail. By supporting these cruel standards practices, vets are essentially going against point 1.1 in the code of professional conduct.

    I also wonder why a vet in training would not be affected by what they might witness? The author seems to believe seeing farm practice would not affect or convince anyone to go vegetarian/vegan. I’m aware that vets have to visit a slaughterhouse during their training (is this still the case?) & see the killing floor with their own eyes. How could anyone who cares about animals not have an issue with this? Is there a humane way to kill an animal against its will? Euthanasia via barbiturate overdose is not practical in farm animals & I believe that is the only humane way to end a life. Would we subject our own pet cats & dogs to slaughterhouse methods? Would we be happy to die that way ourselves? If the answer is no, then current methods cannot be called humane. And if the methods are not humane then why do vets support them?

    Eating animals is totally unnecessary when there are other food sources available, it harms the environment (animal agriculture is responsible for more greenhouse gases than world transport combined) & animals are treated like machines for profit not as sentient beings. These facts are becoming more widely acknowledged by the general public so vets, as intelligent human beings should also surely be able to recognise these facts?

    Vets are supposed to be advocates for ALL animals but by supporting the use of animals as commodities & supporting the continued use of cruel industry standard practices, they do not support the health & welfare of those animals. The veterinary industry should actively recognise that change needs to be made but as long as there is money to be made I doubt it will. I do believe public opinion, the rise of the vegan lifestyle & a reduction in supply/demand will ultimately affect the farming industry (as it has already affected the dairy industry). This will surely force farmers & vets to change their practices until one day in the future animal farming will no longer exist.

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