Aug 01 2008
Discouraging News from Veterinary Medical Association Meeting
Recently the AMVA (American Veterinary Medical Association) held its annual meeting; reports of the topics discussed are discouraging. Per an article reported in MedicalNewToday.com several veterinary speakers clearly continue to support major pet food manufacturers. Dr. Sally C. Perea a veterinarian who consults with the pet food industry stated that smaller, specialty pet food companies may not be as safe as the larger pet food companies “because they may not have the same number of safety checks as a larger company.” Dr. Jeannie Perron stated the 2007 pet food recall – the largest pet food recall in history of the world – prompted a “knee jerk” reaction from Congress and the new mandated pet food safety regulations might “not necessarily be well thought out reaction, to add to pending legislation provisions directed at pet food.”
Ahhh c’mon Doctors. For one, there is NO evidence that smaller pet food manufacturers are not just as safe as the ‘big dogs’. In fact, history has proven they are MORE safe. Smaller pet food companies
that do not have the extreme high profit margins, that cannot afford a multi-million dollar a year advertising budget, must rely on word of mouth advertising for their continued success. Their existence depends on continued quality products. Many of these folks are doing a fantastic job producing quality human grade, no import, health promoting pet foods. And…excuse me? Congress’s plan to reform the safety of human a pet food a ‘knee jerk reaction’? That is clearly an endorsement of major pet food manufacturing wishing to continue to keep the pet owning public in the dark. Nope, that doesn’t float either.
I’m not talking about your vet – but many vets are deep in the pockets of major pet food producers. And it’s a shame. For any veterinarian to recommend a dog food or cat food that is full of by-products and chemical preservatives – there is no excuse. If veterinarians would stand up to the pet food companies that produce these less than quality foods and insist on healthier options – changes would happen in the industry. Every practicing veterinarian could choose to offer their clients a line of premium dog foods and cat foods (human grade, no risky imports, no risky chemicals), and in turn provide their clinic with a nice additional income.
Unfortunately most don’t. This leaves their faithful clients who have learned the ‘truth’ about by-products, imports, and chemical preservatives in a quandary; to follow their vet’s advice or go it alone with their pet food choices. For many pet owners, that is a struggle. Many even hide from their vet the fact they have changed their pet’s diet to healthier options. It’s tough to challenge the ‘Doc’. If your pet is on an Rx diet that was prescribed to address the needs of an illness, you must stay on that diet regardless of the quality of the pet food. The only other alternative would be – with your vet’s approval – find a qualified pet nutritionist who can develop a home made diet that still addresses the concerns of the illness. But remember, illness comes first – nutrition second. Your goal is to fend off illness with quality nutrition long before there is an issue.
- Palin At The Republican Governors Association Meeting
- Mizuno Running Shoes Earn American Podiatric Medical Association Seal of Acceptance
- Gaming, it’s not just for your parent’s basement anymore
- The American Medical Association and The New Yorker have some explainin’ to do.
- Open Letter To San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom
2 Responses to “Discouraging News from Veterinary Medical Association Meeting”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Not A Member? Register for Free!






Susan,
Thank you so much for all of the work that you do! I have been “fighting” with my vet for the last several months over their insistence that I feed my cats one of the food brands that they sell to help with urinary crystals. Their reasoning on why natural food was not good was because “there have been lots of tests on the long term effect of BHA & BHT and not enough tests on apples and cranberries” and “I haven’t seen any cats out picking apples and cranberries to eat”. Well, my thoughts were “I haven’t seen any cats eating chemical preservatives in the wild either”. It is just so infuriating that the people you trust with the medical care of your animals continue to be fooled by these pet food companies. I can only hope that all of the work you are doing and the awareness of the public will result in some changes.
You are welcome Tina! I try.