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Don't read this if you have a weak stomach but remember :
Your Pets Life depends on You!
What's Really for Dinner?
During many years now a change has emerged in the
disease and illness of animals presented to veterinarians. In the
early 1960s, the main concerns were those of infectious agents
causing Canine Distemper, Feline Distemper, Hepatitis, leptospirosis,
staph and strep infections, etc.
However during the 197Os and to the present time we
are seeing an epidemic of chronic degenerative
diseases. True, the widely accepted program of preventative
vaccination programs virtually wiped out the viral caused diseases
and antibiotics helped stem the bacterial infections, but something
else is operative here. We are now seeing both in the animal and
human populations, a sharing of chronic degenerative diseases such
as generalized allergies, arthritis, dermatitis, congestive heart
failure, kidney failure, liver pathologies, diabetes, AIDS, tumors
and cancer. Also, lifespans of
animals have shortened during this period.
Sheep-herders with working
dogs living to be 2l-25 years of age use to be the norm. These dogs
were still herding sheep at that age, and the bitches were
delivering litters of healthy puppies at 20 years of age! Today, we
are lucky to find dogs living to be 10 years old, and many of these
suffering from various forms of chronic degenerative disease. Of
course in the 1940s our air, water and food was clean and virtually
free of chemicals. Shepherd's
dogs worked in clean air, ate fresh lamb stew and vegetables and
home-baked bread along with their master.
Ingredients to watch for:
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Good |
Bad |
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Chicken
Chicken Liver
Chicken Broth
Turkey
Lamb
Herring
Egg
Carrots
Ground Whole Rice
Ground Whole Oats
Whole Barley
Canola Oil
Real Cranberries
Real Blueberries
Flax seed
Garlic
Whole Apples
Zucchini
Sweet Potato
Potatoes |
Meat By-Products
Rendered Fats
White Rice (unless special diet)
Ethoxyquin
(more info)
Corn
Cellulose (non-digestible wood pulp)
Pre-Processed Grains
Safflower or Sunflower Oil
Chicken or Animal Fats
Corn Gluten Meal
Digests
Artificial Preservatives
Flavors and Colors
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The Truth About Commercial Pet Food
by Tina Perry
Cow brains. Sheep
guts. Chicken heads. Road kill. Rancid grain. These are a few of the
so-called nutritionally balanced ingredients found in the commercial
pet food served to companion animals every day.
More than 95
percent of US companion animals derive their nutritional needs from
a single source: processed pet food. When people think of pet food,
many envision whole chickens, choice cuts of beef, fresh grains, and
all the nutrition that a dog or cat may ever need -- images that pet
food manufacturers promote in their advertisements.
What these
companies do not reveal is that instead of whole chickens they have
substituted chicken heads, feet, and intestines. Those choice cuts
of beef are really cow brains, tongues, esophagi, fetal tissue
dangerously high in hormones, and diseased and even
cancerous meat. Those whole grains have had the starch removed for
corn starch powder and the oil extracted for corn oil, or they are
hulls and other remnants from the milling process. Grains used that
are truly whole have usually been deemed unfit for human consumption
because of mold, contaminants, poor quality, or poor handling
practices.
Pet food is one of the worlds most synthetic edible
products, containing virtually no whole ingredients.
Pet food
manufacturers have become masters at inducing companion animals to
eat things cat and dogs would normally spurn. Pet food scientists
have learned that it's possible to take a mixture of inedible
scraps, fortify it with artificial vitamins and minerals, preserve
it so that it can sit on the shelf for more than a year, add dyes to
make it attractive, and then extrude it into whimsical shapes that
appeal to the human consumer. For this, pet food companies can
expect to earn $9 billion in sales in 1996.
Scraps and
Byproducts
For years, many
care givers have tried to avoid feeding their companion animals
people food leftovers, having been warned by veterinarians about the
heath problems they can cause. Yet much scrap material from the
human food industry is ending up in dogs and cats dinner bowls. What
the consumer purchases and what the manufacturer advertises are
often two entirely different products, and this difference threatens
the animals healthy, especially as they age. Learning to read
ingredient labels and taking the time to read them carefully is
crucial to making an educated choice when purchasing pet food.
Ingredients are listed in descending order of weight (heaviest
first) under standards established by the Center for Veterinary
Medicine for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The name of the
product (in most states) is dictated by the regulations of the
American Association of Feed Control Officials (AAFCO). The trouble
is, AAFCO standards can lead to deceptive product names due to the
weight and volume variations between wet and dry ingredients. Also,
the average consumer has no idea what the definitions for the listed
ingredients mean. Preservatives, vitamins, minerals, flavorings, and
cereal make up most of what the companion animal eats.
It is not
happenstance that four of the top five major pet food companies in
the United States are
subsidiaries
of major multinational food production companies: Colgate Palmolive
(which produces Hills Science Diet), Heinz, Nestle, and Mars )see
The Corporate Connection). From a business standpoint,
multi-national food companies owning pet food manufacturers is an
ideal relationship. The multinationals have captive market in which
to dump their waste products, and the pet food manufacturers have a
direct source of bulk materials. Both make a profit from selling
scraps that originate from places far worse than the dinner table.
In his 1986 book Pet Allergies veterinarian Al Plechner sums up
what
goes into companion animals food:
Condemned parts and animals
rejected for human consumption are routinely rerouted for commercial
pet foods. A similar fate applies to so-called 4-D animals. These
are food animals picked up dead, or that are dying, diseased, or
disabled, and do not meet human-food qualifications. They are
processed straightaway for companion animal consumption. Little goes
to waste. Says Plechner, Food processing refuse of all sorts winds
up in your animals dinner bowls. Moldy grains. Rancid foods. Meat
meal. The latter is ground-up slaughterhouse discards often
containing disease-ridden tissue and high levels of hormones and
pesticides, the very things that may have contributed to the death
of the steer or hog. A decade later, his words still apply. When
cattle, swine, chickens, lambs, or other animals meet their ends at
a slaughterhouse, the choice cuts -- lean muscle tissue and organs
prized by humans -- are trimmed away from the carcass for human
consumption. Whatever remains of the carcass (bones, blood, pus,
intestines, ligaments, subcutaneous fat, hooves, horns, beaks, and
any other parts not normally consumed by humans) is, according to
the pet food industry, perfectly fit as a protein source for cat and
dog food.
The Pet Food
Institute, the trade association of pet food manufacturers,
acknowledges in its 1994 Fact Sheet the importance of using
byproducts in pet foods as additional income for processors and
farmers. The purchase and use of these ingredients by the pet food
industry not only provides nutritional foods for pets at reasonable
costs, but provides an important source of income to American
farmers and processors of meat, poultry, and seafood products for
human consumption. Many of these remnants are indigestible and
provide a questionable source of nutrition. The amount of nutrition
provided by meat byproducts, meals, and digests varies from vat to
vat of this animal protein soup. A vat filled with chicken feet,
beaks, and viscera is going to make available a lower amount of
protein than a vat of breast meat. James Morris and Quinton Rogers,
professors with Department of Molecular Biosciences at the
University of California at Davis Veterinary School of Medicine,
assert that there is virtually no information on the
bio-availability of nutrients for companion animals in many of the
common dietary ingredients used in pet foods. These ingredients are
generally byproducts of the meat, poultry and fishing industries,
with the potential for wide variation in nutrient composition.
Claims of nutritional adequacy of pet foods based on the current
AAFCO nutrient allowances (profiles) do not give assurances of
nutritional adequacy and will not until ingredients are analyzed and
bioavailability values are incorporated. Meat byproducts, the
catch-all term of the pet food industry, is a misnomer because these
byproducts contain little if any meat. Byproducts contain little if
any meat. Byproduct are animal parts leftover after the meat has
been stripped from the bone. Chicken byproducts include heads, feet,
entrails, lungs, spleens, kidneys, brains, livers, stomachs, noses,
blood, and intestines free of their contents. What the pet food
manufactures fail to mention is that most byproducts, digests and
meals are also filled with other substances, such as cancerous
tissue cut from the carcass, plastic foam packaging containing
spoiled meat from supermarkets, ear tags, spoiled slaughterhouse
meat, road kill, and pieces of downer animals.
Canned
Cannibalism
Another
source of meat that isn't mentioned on pet food labels is pet
byproducts, the bodies of dogs and cats. In 1990 the San Francisco
Chronicle reported that euthanized companion animals were found in
pet foods. Although pet food company executives and the National
Renderers Association vehemently denied the report, the American
Veterinary Medical Association and the FDA confirmed the story. The
pets serve a viable purpose by providing foodstuff for the animal
feed chain, said Lea McGovern, chief of the FDA's
animal feed
safety branch. Because of the sheer volume of animals rendered and
the similarity in protein content between poultry byproducts and
processed dogs and cats, rendering plant workers say it would be
impossible for purchasers to know the exact contents of what they
buy. In fact, Sacramento Rendering cited by inspectors five times in
the past two years for product-labeling violations.
Grease and Grain
The most
nutritious dry pet food is no better than the worst if an animals
will not eat it. Pet food scientists have discovered that spraying
the kibble or pellets with a combination of refined animal fat,
lard, kitchen grease, and other oils too rancid or deemed inedible
for humans makes an otherwise bland or distasteful product
palatable. Animal fat is mainly packing house waste or supermarket
trimmings from the packaging of meats. Animals love the taste of
this sprayed fat, which also acts as a binding agent to which
manufacturers may add other flavor enhancers. The pungent odor
wafting from an open bag of pet food is created by this concoction.
Restaurant grease has become a major component of feed-grade animal
fat over the last 15 years. Often held in 50-gallon drums for weeks
or months in extreme temperatures, this grease is usually kelp
outside with no regard for its safety or further use. The rancid
grease is then picked up by fat blenders who mix the animal and
vegetable fats together, stabilize them with powerful antioxidants
to prevent further spoilage, and then sell the blended products to
pet food companies. Rancid, heavily preserved fats are extremely
difficult to digest and can lead to a host of animal health
problems, including digestive upsets, diarrhea, gas, and bad breath.
Once considered a filler by the pet food industry, the amount of
grain products included in pet food has risen over the last decade
as the American population has focused its attention away from
consuming beef and toward a healthier diet of grains and vegetables.
Commonly two of the top three pet food ingredients are some form of
grain products. For instance, Alpo's Beef Flavored Dinner lists
ground yellow corn, soybean meal, and poultry byproduct meal as its
top three ingredients. 9 Lives Crunchy Meals lists ground yellow
corn, corn gluten meal, and poultry byproduct meal as its top three
ingredients. Of the top four ingredients of Purina's O.N.E. Dog
Formula -- chicken, ground yellow corn, ground wheat, and corn
gluten meal -- two are corn-based products from the same source.
This is an industry practice known as splitting. When components of
the same whole ingredient are listed separately (ground yellow corn
and corn gluten meal) it appears that there is less corn than
chicken, even when the whole ingredient may weigh more than the
chicken. Soy is another common ingredient in many pet foods. It is
used by the manufacturers to boost the claimed protein content and
add bulk so that when animals eat a product containing soy they will
fell more sated. Tofu is suitable for humans, but most forms of
soybean do not agree with a dog or cat's digestive system. Like many
other pet food ingredients, soy is virtually unusable by an animal's
body. Being obligate carnivores, cats have little ability to digest
any nutrients from soy. The problem is worse for dogs because they
lack the essential amino acid to digest soy products. Soy has also
been linked to bloat and gas in many dogs.
Additives and Processing
Pet food industry
critics note that many of the ingredients (such as corn syrup and
corn gluten meal) used as humectants to prevent oxidation also bind
water molecules in such a way that the food actually sticks to the
animal's colon and may cause blockage. Blockage of the colon may
cause an increased risk of cancer of the colon or rectum. Two-thirds
of the pet food manufactured in the United States contains synthetic
preservatives added by the manufacturer. Of the remaining third, 90
percent includes ingredients already stabilized by synthetic
preservatives. Because most pet food contains large percentages of
added fat, a stabilizer is needed to maintain the quality of the
food. Sodium nitrite, often used as a coloring agent, fixative, and
preservative, has the ability to combine with natural stomach and
food chemicals (secondary amends) to create nitrosamines, powerful
cancer-causing agents, according to A Consumer's Dictionary of Food
Additives.
Many pet foods
advertised as preservative-free do not contain preservatives. Almost
all rendered meats have synthetic preservatives added as stabilizer,
but manufacturers aren't required to list preservatives they
themselves haven't added. Premixed vitamin additives can also
contain preservatives. In the 1003 Journal of the American
Veterinary Medical Association, veterinarian Philip Roudebush
reported finding low concentrations of synthetic antioxidant
preservatives in all analyzed samples of products labeled as
chemical free or all-natural. Other types of additives depend on
whether the pet food is semi-moist, dry or canned. Because
semi-moist food contains 25-50 percent water, antimicrobial
preservatives must be used. Propylene glycol was frequently used in
cat food until it was pulled in 1992 for causing a variety of health
problems. Processing greatly alters the nutritional value of the
food ingredients. Veterinarian R. L. Wysong states in Rationale for
Animal Nutrition: Processing is the wild card in nutritional value
that is, by and large, simply ignored. Heating, freezing,
dehydrating, canning, extruding, pelleting, baking and so forth, are
so commonplace that they are simply thought of as synonymous with
food itself. Because the ingredients that pet food companies use are
not wholesome, and harsh manufacturing practices destroy what little
nutritional value the food may have had in the first place, the
final product must be fortified with vitamins and minerals.
Questionable
Nutrition
How, then, can
any pet food be guaranteed to be 100 percent complete or
nutritionally adequate? As long as it meets the AAFCO minimum
standards, such a guarantee can be on the label. Yet in 1994, feed
tests conducted by the New York State Agriculture Department showed
7 percent of all pet foods analyzed failed chemical analyses for
guaranteed nutrients. Other states report similar findings, with
failure of analyzed feed ranging from to 12 percent. Even if a pet
food meets AAFCO standards, certain nutritional requirements (for
example, lysine) can vary between species by as much as seven-fold.
Although manufacturers clam that millions of companion animals can
thrive on a diet consisting of nothing by commercial pet food,
research and an increasing number of veterinarians implicate
processed pet food as a source of disease or as an exacerbating
agent for a number of degenerative diseases. For example, kidney
disease is on of the top three killers of companion animals.
According to Plechner, the extra protein and harsh ingredients of
many pet foods place an overload on the kidneys. Left untreated, the
toxic buildup leads to vomiting, loss of appetite, uremic poisoning,
and death. Wysong adds, In the last few years, large statistical
studies have shown the link between the diet (of processed foods)
and a variety of degenerative diseases, including cancer, heart
disease, allergies, arthritis, obesity, dental disease, etc. After
extensive research, the Animal Protection Institute (API) published
a Pet Food Investigative Report to educate companion animal care
givers about pet food ingredients, ingredient definitions, labeling,
and dietary ailments resulting from processed commercial pet food,
including the most commonly know brands. Yet, whether such food is
purchased at the supermarket, pet store, or from a veterinarian, it
makes little difference in terms of the quality -- only in the cost.
Since the report was published earlier this year, API has conducted
more research on holistic pet care and pet food alternatives, but
still claims that the vast majority of pet foods available on the
market today provide less that optimum nutrition for companion
animals.
It is sad
to think that the food provided by animal care givers to their
four-legged friends could be hazardous to the animals'; health and
longevity. Care givers should assume responsibility for providing as
healthful a diet as possible for the animals in the care. Consumers
should be informed: speak with a holistic practitioner or herbalist,
or consult your veterinarian (but be aware that a veterinarian's
knowledge of nutrition may be limited to the two weeks of nutrition
he or she had veterinary school 20 years ago). Although the ideal
solution would be for companion animals to be fed only wholesome
homemade and/or vegetarian diets, this is not an optician for
everyone -- the cost and time commitment is sometimes prohibitive.
By taking more moderate steps, however, care givers can still
greatly improve a companion
animals' diet
and quality of life.
Tina
Perry is an animal advocate with the Animal Protection Institute.
Reprinted from The Animals' Agenda
Nov/Dec 1996
We are very happy to report that Mother Hubbard, HealthyPetNet's Life's Abundance
and Flint River Ranch contain NONE of the things you have read
about above, only human-grade, whole ingredients!!!
Important
Disclaimer:
The stories and information on this site are not meant to diagnose
or prescribe for you. If you or your pet has a medical problem, you
should consult your medical doctor or veterinarian. The ideas and
information on this site have not been endorsed or approved by the
FDA. In no event shall the owners of this website be liable for any
damages whatsoever resulting from any action arising in connection
with the use of this information or its publication, including any
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use, or not to use, any information is the sole responsibility of
the reader. Opinions expressed here are those of individual
contributors. This web site does not verify or endorse the claims of
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