
FOOD
NOT FIT
FOR A PET
By
Dr Wendell O. Belfield, DVM
The
most frequently asked question in my practice is, "Which
commercial pet food do you recommend?" My standard
answer is "None." I am certain that pet-owners
notice changes in their animals after using different
batches of the same brand of pet food. Their pets may
have diarrhea, increased flatulence, a dull hair coat,
intermittent vomiting or prolonged scratching. These are
common symptoms associated with commercial pet foods.
In
1981, as Martin Zucker and I wrote How to Have a Healthier
Dog , we discovered the full extent of negative effects
that commercial pet food has on animals. In February 1990,
San Francisco Chronicle staff writer John Eckhouse
went even further with an exposé entitled "How
Dogs and Cats Get Recycled into Pet Food".
Eckhouse
wrote: "Each year, millions of dead American dogs
and cats are processed along with billions of pounds of
other animal materials by companies known as renders.
The finished product...tallow and meat meal...serve as
raw materials for thousands of items that include cosmetics
and pet food."
Pet
food company executives made the usual denials. But federal
and state agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration,
and medical groups, such as the American Veterinary Medical
Association and the California Veterinary Medical Association
(CVMA), confirm that pets, on a routine basis, are rendered
after they die in animal shelters or are disposed of by
health authorities & emdash; and the end product frequently
finds its way into pet food.
Government
health officials, scientists and pet food executives argue
that such open criticism of commercial pet food is unfounded.
James Morris, a professor at the School
of Veterinary
Medicine at Davis
, California
, has said, "Any products not
fit for human consumption are very well sterilized, so
nothing can be transmitted to the animal." Individuals
who make such statements know nothing of the meat and
rendering business.
For
seven years I was a veterinary meat inspector for the
US Department of Agriculture and the State of California
. I waded through blood, water,
pus and fecal material, inhaled the fetid stench from
the killing floor and listened to the death cries of slaughtered
animals.
Prior
to World War II, most slaughterhouses were all-inclusive;
that is, livestock was slaughtered and processed in one
location. There was a section for smoking meats, a section
for processing meats into sausages, and a section for
rendering. After World War II, the meat industry became
more specialized. A slaughterhouse dressed the carcasses,
while a separate facility made the sausages. The rendering
of slaughter waste also became a separate specialty &
emdash; no longer within the jurisdiction of federal meat
inspectors and out of the public eye.
To
prevent condemned meat from being rerouted and used for
human consumption, government regulations require that
meat be "denatured" before removal from the
slaughterhouse and shipment to rendering facilities. In
my time as a veterinary meat inspector, we denatured with
carbolic acid (a potentially corrosive disinfectant) and/or
creosote (used for wood-preservation or as a disinfectant).
Both substances are highly toxic. According to federal
meat inspection regulations, fuel oil, kerosene, crude
carbolic acid and citronella (an insect repellent made
from lemon grass) are all approved denaturing materials.
Condemned
livestock carcasses treated with these chemicals can become
meat and bone meal for the pet food industry. Because
rendering facilities are not government-controlled, any
animal carcasses can be rendered & emdash; even dogs
and cats. As Eileen Layne of the CVMA told the Chronicle,
"When you read pet food labels, and it says
"meat and bone meal", that's what it is: cooked
and converted animals, including some dogs and cats."
Some
of these dead pets & emdash; those euthanised by veterinarians
& emdash; already contain pentobarbital before treatment
with the denaturing process. According to University
of Minnesota
researchers, the sodium pentobarbital
used to euthanise pets "survives rendering without
undergoing degradation". Fat stabilizers are introduced
into the finished rendered product to prevent rancidity.
Common chemical stabilizers include BHA (butylated hydroxyanisole)
and BHT (butylated hydroxytoluene) & emdash; both
known to cause liver and kidney dysfunction & emdash;
and ethoxyquin, a suspected carcinogen. Many semi-moist
dog foods contain propylene glycol & emdash; first
cousin to the anti-freeze agent, ethylene glycol, that
destroys red blood-cells. Lead frequently shows up in
pet foods, even those made from livestock meat and bone
meal. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology study, titled
"Lead in Animal Foods", found that a nine-pound
cat fed on commercial pet food ingests more lead than
the amount considered potentially toxic for children.
I
have been practicing small-animal medicine for more than
25 years. Every day I see the casualties of pet industry
propaganda. But the professors in the teaching institutions
of veterinary medicine generally support an industry that
has little regard for the quality of health in our companion
animals.
One
last word of caution: meat and bone meal from sources
not fit for human consumption have found their way into
poultry feed. This means that animal products rendered
under questionable conditions are fed to birds that may
wind up on your table. Remember this when you are eating
your next piece of chicken or turkey.
(Dr
Belfield is a graduate of Tuskegee Institute of Veterinary
Medicine and is now in private practice in San
Jose , California
. Dr Belfield established the first
orthomolecular veterinary hospital in the US
. He is co-author of The Very
Healthy Cat Book and How to Have a Healthier
Dog . This article first appeared in Let's Live
Magazine , May 1992.)
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