“…In high-stress, unpredictable environments such as households experiencing family violence, exposure to animal abuse may be particularly traumatic for children for whom pets serve as security-providing attachment figures (McDonald et al, 2015; Melson, 2003; Yorke, 2010). Moreover, recent qualitative research suggests that violence in families where animal maltreatment is present is multidirectional and children’s exposure to animal maltreatment is often complex, involving violence at the hands of multiple family members with multifarious motives (McDonald et al, 2015). Reporting on qualitative interview data from 58 school-aged (7–12 years) children recruited from residential and nonresidential DV services, McDonald et al (2015) found three themes across children’s accounts of their exposure to animal maltreatment.…”