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A Prescription for Disease:
Commercial Pet Foods' Deadly Ingredients
By Julie Cantonwine & Dr. Gaia
Mather
www.HealthyPetsNW.com
If you watch much television at all you’re bound to see the
ads: sleek and handsome purebred dogs running across the screen in slow motion,
so eager to reach the bowl of Gravy Train (or Alpo or Mighty Dog, you name the
brand). Most recently the ads are accompanied by their owners (trainers and
veterinarians) telling us how wholesome and nutritious this food is for their
beloved pets. Commercial pet food is a great convenience for busy pet owners
but do we really know exactly what we are feeding our furry friends and
companions? The $11 billion per year U.S. pet food industry would like us to
believe that we are feeding our animals a wholesome and nutritious diet as they
try so hard to portray in their ads.
What most consumers don’t know is that the pet food industry
is just an extension of the human food and agriculture industries: a way for
these large companies to get rid of their waste. What is really in pet food?
The answer to this question is shocking and disturbing, but important for the
well-informed consumer to know. The majority of commercial pet foods are made
by a handful of large multinational companies:
Nestle - Alpo, Fancy Feast, Friskies and Mighty Dog
Heinz - 9-Lives, Amore, Gravy Train, Kibbles & Bits, Recipe, Vets
Colgate - Hills Science Diet
Proctor & Gamble - Eukanuba and Iams
According to Dr. Richard Pitcairn in his book,
Dr. Pitcairn’s Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs & Cats , there is
no mandatory federal inspection of ingredients used in pet food manufacturing.
In all but two or three states, the law allows pet food makers to use “4-D
sources”, that is tissues from animals that are dead, dying, disabled or
diseased when they arrive at the slaughterhouse. Another shocking fact is that
before meat even arrives at the rendering plant it has already been saturated
with chemicals.
To comply with government regulations all meat rejected by slaughterhouses must
be “denatured”; a procedure designed to make it unpalatable to humans, thus
ensuring it cannot be resold as human grade meat. There are a variety of
methods used. Dr. Wendell Belfied, DVM (former USDA vet) wrote in “Let’s Live”
magazine: “In my time as a veterinary meat inspector, we denatured with
carbolic acid (phenol, a potentially corrosive disinfectant) and/or creosote
(used to preserve wood, also a disinfectant).” According to federal meat
inspection regulations fuel oil, kerosene, carbolic acid and citronella are the
approved denaturing materials used. Other foods rejected by the USDA that ends
up in pet foods include moldy grains and rancid animal fats.
According to an article in “Environmental News” (March ’99) a large percentage
of commercial pet food is made up of meat by-products: a toxic brew containing
diseased and contaminated meat from slaughterhouses, animal heads, toenails,
chicken feathers, feet and beaks. It also includes dead animals picked up from
the nation’s roads, rancid restaurant grease, and thousands of animals
euthanized in animal hospitals and shelters (flea collars and all). Along with
the meat come any drugs that have been introduced into the animals such as
hormones, antibiotics and barbiturates used to put pets to sleep. Unsold
supermarket meats arrive in their original Styrofoam and plastic packaging are
tossed into the pot.
If you haven’t already made some changes in your pet’s diet, this information
will certainly make you want to seek some alternatives. One good resource for
dietary information is Dr. Pitcairn’s book, which contains recipes to make your
pet’s food as well as natural alternatives to commercial foods. Other
recommendations for reading on this subject are the book ‘Foods Pets Die For’
by Ann Martin, New Sage Press, 1977.
According to the “Whole Dog Journal”, vol.3, no.8, quality foods should contain
the following:
- Superior sources of protein (whole meats or
single-source meat meal)
- A meat source as one of the first two ingredients
(chicken or chicken meal for instance)
- Whole, unprocessed grains, vegetables and other foods
(rich in nutrients and enzymes)
Quality food should NOT contain:
- Meat by-products (which are produced through the
rendering process)
- Artificial preservatives (BHA, BHT, or Ethoxyquin)
- Artificial colors
- Sweeteners
- Propylene glycol
It would be wonderful if we could all feed our animals an
all-natural raw food diet, but for some the following alternatives will be very
helpful. The following is not a complete list of all that is available but will
give you some respected names:
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CANIDAE
CALIFORNIA NATURAL
PETGUARD LIFESPAN
SOLID GOLD
PRECISE
STEVE'S REAL FOOD |
FLINT RIVER RANCH
INNOVA
WYSONG
WELLNESS
NATURAL BLEND
SOJOURNER FARMS |
We share this information to educate consumers on the
potentially dangerous ingredients that are in most commercial pet foods. Of
course, a natural diet is the best for our companion pet's good health. A
healthy pet is a happy pet.
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