The declaw, a surgical procedure where the first bones in a cat’s front toes are amputated, is perhaps the most controversial routine procedure in veterinary medicine. Sure, most cosmetic procedures have their foes, but nothing seems to scream "cruelty!" like multiple toe amputations.
I embark upon a treatment of my approach to the declaw only by special request and not without significant trepidation. Like many in my profession, especially within my generation and younger, I have struggled with the morality of the procedure. In my case, it has taken many years to feel comfortable performing them—not only as a result of their deceptive difficulty but because it seemed hard to justify.
If we have a moral responsibility to preserve the well-being of an animal, is it not anathema to this belief that we inflict pain for our own selfish comfort—and that of our furniture (!). I still struggle, but at this stage of my career I now feel I have achieved something of a personal, moral balance on the issue.
To be sure, the procedure is painful. Though there’s a lot more done out there that also falls under "cruel and unusual" in the pet world. For example, I’d argue against ear crops, tail dockings, and some dewclaw removals before declawing—so long as the rationale behind the need for the procedure is sound and so long as the procedure is performed humanely.
These conditions, however, are not so easily achieved. These are my personal standards for how declaws should be dealt with (every vet is different) and see where you find fault with my approach. If so, I warmly welcome your comments.
- Fluffy’s owners are told that I do not recommend the procedure. Her owners must then explain why they’d like the procedure. "Because my cats have always been declawed" is not an acceptable answer. The only acceptable answer is that they would otherwise be unable to keep Fluffy, as she is destructive, or because she hurts the children or their elderly grandmother, or because they’d rather prevent destruction and injury knowing they’d have to find her another home if this occurred.
- I strongly urge clients to reconsider the procedure if Fluffy is over a year old. The older (and heavier) the cat the higher the possibility of serious complications like phantom pain and painful infections. Owners should be told these complications exist and that their rate increases exponentially with age and weight.
- The owners must truly understand the nature of the procedure: Mr. X, when we remove Fluffy’s claws, we amputate her toes at the first knuckle. This will be painful for Fluffy.
- The owners must be advised of alternatives: Have you considered finding her another home, claw coverings such as Soft Paws, or trying a variety of scratching posts?
- The owners must be given no alternatives when it comes to adequate pain relief and follow-up care: If Fluffy is over a year old or overweight she will have to stay in hospital for several days to insure adequate pain relief in a controlled environment. I use nerve blocks, opiate patches, opiate injections, and anti-inflammatory drugs routinely. No declaw procedure escapes a pain protocol (which can add up to $250 to a bill). For this reason an older kitty declaw procedure can cost as much as $600.
- The owners must be committed to adequate follow-up care, including strict cage rest for adults or complete restriction of jumping and climbing for kittens.
- The surgical procedure must be carefully undertaken: I don’t use a laser, as had been recommended in years past (the laser declaw has been largely discarded by the profession). Ultimately, this approach was considered more traumatic than initially billed (especially in the hands of practitioners still learning to use the device). Consistent with leading veterinary surgeon’s recommendations, I use a very sharp scalpel and high-quality, flexible surgical glue on the outside of the incision.
- And finally: Fluffy must remain an indoor cat—no exceptions!
I do indeed understand when people tell me they believe declaws are barbaric. But if declawing Fluffy will allow her to keep her home and give her fifteen years in a loving environment, I’ll do it—as long as I’m convinced I can do it with minimal pain and only if I believe her parent is a responsible, well-informed, and thoroughly compliant client. For the record, the second condition is one far more rarely met.
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There are many things I just don't understand as to why some people get pets. I think our society is one of instant gratification and the unwillingness to put in the time to properly train their pet. Is it really that difficult or time consuming or are some people just too lazy? If it is broken, we need it fixed immediately or we need a new one.
You do have a hard decision and as you have written previously, if you don’t do the procedure, they will just go to a Vet that is more than willing to do the procedure without any questions asked.
Really appreciate your writing and perspective…
Cheryl October 19th, 2006 12:21:00 PM
I share your opinion... I'd rather see a cat declawed than lose a home, or be tossed outside. One of my regular front porch visitors is a 12 year old cat owned by someone a few blocks away, but the cat "scratched the baby" so now it's not allowed inside anymore. In this case, I wish the owners would have the cat declawed so it's not outside on the busy streets (it's a black cat, too).
That being said, I also wish more people would put effort into training their cats to use appropriate scratching posts/areas. Cats come already housetrained, so owners are off the hook for that -- they should instead invest their time in scratch-training. Our house is literally overrun with posts to scratch on, and it works -- none of our cats scratch the furniture or the floors. Cats will scratch in the proper place if they're given enough opportunities to do it.
Leigh-Ann October 20th, 2006 02:13:00 AM
I've had a number of cats over the years, both as an owner (to some degree I suppose as at the time I owned cats I still lived at home with mom) and now as a foster parent for different cat resuce organizations. I have never and will never declaw a cat, inside or not. People justify cat declawing by claiming they don't need their claws as indoor pets and the claws are more destructive and the surgery 'no big deal.' Well I agree if its a decision between declawing and deserting, its an easy decision to make.
However, I once saw a very gruesome video of what really happens to a cat when it is declawed and it turned my stomach. How anyone can consider this surgery 'not a big deal' boggles my mind and I hope that vets and pet owners are slowly getting this message.
Shannon October 20th, 2006 02:58:00 AM
I agree that the biggest problem is that many owners see a cat as a self-sufficient creature for whom care is minimal and training unnecessary. And you've identified one of the few positive aspects of declawing: people feel guilty sending cats outdoors once declawed. Not that it stops the truly irresponsible.
Dr. Patty Khuly October 20th, 2006 08:16:00 AM
Cat declawing is a serious decision that needs to be thought out and discussed before it is taken. We should all think twice about it even if we know that the cat will always be indoors. A cat that has been declawed and somehow ends up on the street is a sad thing indeed. Years ago a cat came to our doorstep very late in a warm Miami night; my aunt, being the softie she is, decided to feed the cat, which looked skinny. It wasn’t until the next morning that we noticed the bloody the mess the cat really was. This cat was in so much pain but still so incredibly sweet! She let us pick her up and we took her to the vet. The vet told us that the cat was not only declawed but that her incisors had also been removed and that she was probably attacked by other cats in the street and was in such poor shape because she had absolutely no way to defend herself. Needless to say we adopted the cat and she was happy and loved until the day she died about 9 years later. Now, who does those things to a cat and then “lose” it?! I can tell you that from the moment that cat came to our home it was never let outside, ever, even when she was trying to be sneaky and get out unnoticed.
Ana October 20th, 2006 01:33:00 PM
Oooo...cat declaws. Touchy subject indeed, and one that I'm very passionate about. I agree with your stance, Dr. Khuly - there are worse things than a declaw as far as the cat's care is concerned - banishment to the outdoors, etc. And cat's claws can do a great deal of damage to furnishings and skin (although I think they do worse to skin when they learn to use their teeth!). I hope that by the time I'm practicing, declaws will no longer be routine. Until then, it seems the best thing to do is to educate the owner's about the specifics of the procedure and the possible consequences, especially the possibility that the procedure is so traumatic that it can alter the cat's personality and make them more aggressive, especially with their teeth. Whenever I adopt kittens out, it usually helps my "don't declaw" speech to include humane society and professional organization positions on the procedure - that it should be used as a last resort. I'd support mandatory hospital stays for ALL declaws, as well as charging owners up the rear for pain control. Properly declawed cats can live long, healthy, happy lives - but I still find it disgusting that most owners view elective surgery (with all its inherent risks) as the more convenient way to deal with behavioral problems - especially when every cat I've ever worked with has much preferred the $10 "SmartyKat" cat scratcher from Wal-Mart to any couch! By the way, I was not aware that laser declaws had been largely abandoned. I live in central Oklahoma, and many of the vets here (especially younger ones) offer laser declaws as the newest thing - less pain, shorter recovery time, etc., and people eat it up. "Well, my regular vet told me all about how bad declaws were, but I went to that new vet who does it with a laser, so it's no big deal". :(
anna October 20th, 2006 03:40:00 PM
Another comment on declaws - as a rescue org, I'm 100% on board with Dr. Khuly's stance here. If it's a choice between losing the claws or losing the home, there's no question there, but declawing is generally cruel and unnecessary. Our cat adoption application asks if the person plans to declaw. While a 'yes' answer is not an automatic turndown, it's a big black mark against the adopter. We make sure the adopter realizes EXACTLY what the surgery entails (many people don't realise that the toes are actually amputated), realizes the pain that this will cause the cat, and realizes the potential for behavioral problems as a followup. We will not allow cats over 1 year old to go into a house that plans to declaw, and will only adopt kittens out in these circumstances if EVERYTHING else about the household is perfect. The approach seems to work - we've only had one kitten declawed in 2.5 years of this (and that was due to a person in the home with a compromised immune system, to whom cat scratches would've been dangerous), and have had quite a few adopters change their minds on declawing and swear never to declaw another cat, once they realized what the surgery entailed.
A note that I've not seen mentioned - declawing without following up with proper pain management is a major contributing factor to a cat that will categorically refuse to use the litterbox - even with newspaper litter, scratching with those post-op paws HURTS and quite a few of them associate that pain not with the surgery, but with the litterbox, leading to messes (and quite often the cat losing his or her home.) This has been a point that is quite often effective at getting people to reconsider the surgery.
In my household, I have 3 cats of my own, two of whom were declawed when I got them. I've had as many as 4 foster cats at a time, all of whom had their claws. Out of all those cats, the one I'm most likely to get a scratch from is one of the two that has no front claws. I'm guessing this is because, having no front claws, he's twice as likely to lash out with the back ones when startled or annoyed.
Nan October 20th, 2006 05:20:00 PM
In the ideal world, we would hope that people who desire a cat, go into the decision with the knowledge that cats HAVE claws, they WILL tear up the furniture. In the real world people run into those unknown problems and their first reaction is to change the animal instead of changing the environment. There are all types of cat covers for furniture that can be removed for guests! If people require an animall that does not have these traits, then I would suggest a ferret.
Cat owners who take away their cats ability to defend themselves on the outside, should have THEIR first knuckles removed!
Not only is it the most painfull procedure you can do, but the possibility of their eventual escape from the safe house to their very painfull demise; terrified, wounded and starving is very likely. Once outside, now your declawed cat has no way to climb quickly to avoid dogs and no way to catch food! I am sure there are plenty out there saying, no that won't happen to me, but there are too many uncontrolable variables for anyone to be THAT sure.
VOTE NO FOR DECLAWING!
Diane McKinney October 23rd, 2006 08:50:00 PM
I work as a pet sitter, and sometimes have to medicate the cats in my care. I'm adamantly opposed to declawing in principle, but have found it's so much easier to medicate a cat if she's been declawed. Some cats who still have their claws don't hesitate to scratch me (deeply!) when I medicate them. I'd be interested to know if any of your clients have given this as a reason for declawing. I'd NEVER declaw to protect furniture, but if I had a cat who needed ongoing medication and she attacked me whenever I tried to administer that medication, I might just consider declawing. (I know people medicating cats are supposed to be able to wrap them in towels, but I've never managed to get a towel wrapped around a cat who was actively fighting me!)
Jen November 1st, 2006 08:20:00 PM
We've had well over 75 cats through our home during our time as rescuers, and while we mostly do only dogs at this stage, we still live with our five resident cats.
One of these cats is declawed, as a result of my own ignorance some eight years ago, when every "good" cat owner had their cat vax'd, neutered and declawed. After seeing the issues that these cats suffer from, my stance on declawing is 100% NO.
Don't get me wrong, I understand where you're coming from, and I have a deep respect for all opinions on the matter. However, after many years of rescuing cats I can tell you that there are far more psychological concerns than medical.
Declawed cats are the ones we have to drag out from under the bed. The ones who spray all over my house in an attempt to mask their own insecurities. The ones who wish so badly they could play with the other cats on the cat trees, only to try and fall painfully to the ground when their feet fail them. The ones who do not like to be contained or restrained in any way, making medicating an almost impossibility.
It's gotten to the point where I do not do declawed cats any longer. I will take a giant unneutered tomcat with a URI before I take a young healthy declawed cat.
I also have a portion of my contract that states that our adopted cats will never be declawed under ANY circumstances. If your dog chews things, do you remove all of his teeth? If he digs in the garden, would you declaw HIM?
It comes down to laziness. Owners are too lazy to train their cats. And if the problem is the kids and not the furniture, I ask why any child has unsupervised access to any animal, and what that child did to provoke that response. Once again, the fault lies with the owner, not the poor cat!
I do consultations with cat owners on a daily basis. Why do they trust my advice on cat training? Because they've seen my furniture. 75+ rescues, 5 resident cats... and no scratches.
Kim November 25th, 2006 12:50:00 PM
For Jen- if you need to give a cat medication wrap them up in a comforter first so they can't hurt you or themselves. Some people say a bath towel will do it, but my babies need that full body wrap.
Out of some 10 cats I've lived with I declawed one. That was before I knew it was a finger amputation. He was a stray that when cuddled would put out his claws and GRAB to hold on. Tough to bond when you are wiping away tears of pain. But now, with more cats and more experience under my belt, I don't think I will ever find a situation again where a declawing would help. My declawed fellow definitely gets some extra attention just for hanging around and loving me even though I made that stupid decision.
canoehead February 8th, 2007 09:37:00 AM
I'm commenting rather late, but I'm working my way through the archives and I could not pass this statement by without comment: "If people require an animall that does not have these traits, then I would suggest a ferret." I have had ferrets for about 14 years, and I could not disagree more with this suggestion. Ferrets can be extremely destructive of furniture and especially carpeting and rugs. They are diggers and will take apart a couch from the inside if you don't figure out how to ferret proof your furniture, and you can pretty much give up on the nice carpets for as long as you own ferrets. I love my weasels dearly and they are absolutely the pet of choice for me, but prospective owners should be aware that they are not by any means easy or low maintenance pets. :-)
Regina July 24th, 2007 12:18:00 PM
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