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Why is
Cancer Killing Our Pets?
Courtesy of 'New Living' Newspaper
VACCINES
Over the past decade or so, many
veterinarians have become increasingly
convinced that a number of vaccines are
doing more harm than good for our animal
companions. Some remain necessary, even
mandated by law, such as rabies. But not
all the annual boosters that have been
traditionally given now appear to be
necessary and they may be leading to several
diseases. Among the conditions associated
with vaccines are skin allergies, bladder
infections and cancer. The
U. S.
veterinary community is currently reviewing
most vaccines protocols.
When it is time to revaccinate your animal,
your veterinarian should consider the pet's
age, his/her lifestyle (indoor or outdoor),
his/her general state of health, the
prevalence of the disease in question in the
geographic area where you live, whether your
animal is pregnant, whether or not you board
her/him and other factors. Each case is
individual and should be considered as such.
One of the more no-holds-barred statements
about vaccines is Dr. Richard Pitcairn's
warning: "Giving a vaccine to an animal with
cancer is like pouring gasoline on a fire."
He also advises not vaccinating pets who
have breast tumors or any other growths or
tumors. His overall recommendations
regarding vaccines are these: Try to get
your veterinarian to give single or simple
vaccines rather than complex vaccines.
Young animals can tolerate a reduced
vaccination schedule, but vaccinating is not
advised before sixteen weeks of age. Annual
boosters should be avoided even though they
have been popular. Pitcairn goes so far as
to say avoid "any further vaccinations after
the initial series as they are not
necessary." He adds that the latest
official medical opinion is that annual
boosters are neither required nor effective,
although not all veterinarians will agree
with or even know this fact.
THE PET FOOD INDUSTRY
Perhaps the most shocking and informative
book about the pet food industry is Ann
Martin's "Food Pet's Die For", published in
1997. As Dr. Michael W. Fox, vice president
of the Humane Society of the United States,
says, "Ann Martin is to the pet food
industry what Rachel Caron was to the
petrochemical-pesticide industry." Martin
spent seven years investigating the
commercial pet food industry and what she
uncovered isn't pretty. There are several
reasons you really do not want to feed your
dog or cat commercial foods. Perhaps the
most compelling moral reason is that there
are rendered, euthanized pets in much of
this food. These pets have been mixed with
other materials, including some condemned
for human consumption: "rotten meat from
supermarket shelves, restaurant
grease..'4-D' (dead, diseased, dying and
disabled) animals and roadkill."
The Minister of Agriculture of Quebec told
Martin that dead animals are often cooked
with viscera, bones, fat and fur. In both
the United States and Quebec, this rendering
of pets is not illegal. Martin points to an
article originally published in the San
Francisco Chronicle in which an employee and
ex-employee of a rendering plant admitted
that their company rendered approximately
250,000 to 500,000 pounds of animals, scraps
and more, including "somewhere between
10,000 and 30,000 pounds of dogs and cats a
day."
That's enough to make most of us sick, isn't
it? Martin, a Canadian writer who lives
with several animal companions, went a bit
further in her investigations and discovered
that some pets are euthanized with sodium
pentobarbital and then rendered. This
poison does not break down and goes into
commercial pet food and feed for cows, pigs
and horses. For the detailed report by the
FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine on
popular commercial pet foods containing
pentobarbital. When you read the report,
please know that AD (animal digest) is
animal waste (to be polite)!
Two thirds of the pet food manufactured in
the United States contains added
preservatives, according to the Animal
Protection Institute. There are also
coloring agents, emulsifiers, lubricants,
flavoring agents, pH control agents,
synergists and solvents. "Of the more than
8,600 recognized food additives today, no
toxicity information is available for 46% of
them," the institute says.
EQ (ethoxyquin) is the most common
antioxidant preservative in pet foods. It
has been found in some dogs' livers and
tissues months after the animal stopped
ingesting it. Ethoxyquin is manufactured by
Monsanto Chemical, the largest manufacturer
of bioengineered foods. EQ is listed as a
hazardous chemical by the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and
is considered a pesticide by the USDA. It
is used in most US dog food, but is banned
in Europe. The FDA's Center for Veterinary
Medicine requested that pet food
manufacturers voluntarily reduce the maximum
level for ethoxyquin by half to 75 parts per
million.
None of the products offered by
PetHealthFirst and HealthyPetNet contain
any of the above ingredients!
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