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Clinics implementing low-stress handling report a 70% reduction in the need for chemical restraint for routine procedures, faster appointment times, and dramatically lower rates of staff injury from bites and scratches.

Historically, veterinary curricula heavily emphasized production animals (cattle, pigs, sheep). In a production setting, behavior was viewed through a purely economic lens: abnormal behavior meant poor weight gain or injury. For companion animals, the "medical model" dominated—veterinarians treated the body, while trainers and owners managed the mind. A stiff, high tail wag indicates arousal

In a clinical setting, understanding "distance-increasing" versus "distance-decreasing" signals is life-saving. A wagging tail does not always mean happiness. A stiff, high tail wag indicates arousal. A lip lick, a whale eye (showing the sclera), or tucked ears are distance-increasing signals —the animal is asking space to de-escalate. An aggressive lunge is simply a failed communication. Veterinary science now uses "low-stress handling" techniques based on these behavioral cues to prevent bites and improve diagnostic accuracy (stress alters heart rate and blood pressure, skewing exam data). skewing exam data).