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BIG PHARMA JUST BOUGHT YOUR DOG AND MIGHT PUT YOU IN JAIL?

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http://newswithviews.com/Dean/carolyn14.htm

 

 

BIG PHARMA JUST BOUGHT YOUR DOG AND MIGHT PUT YOU IN JAIL?

 

 

 

Dr. Carolyn Dean, MD, ND and

Elissa Meininger

October 13, 2005

NewsWithViews.com

 

 

 

" Higher profits mean healthier patients " National Commission on

Veterinary Economic Issues 2005

 

" People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment

and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the

public, or in some contrivance to raise prices. " -- Adam Smith 1776

 

Big Pharma and its modern medicine allies are not content to simply

promote products and services to humans that manage to kill 784,000 of

us each year, in the US alone. They now have bought their way in to

the American Veterinarian Medical Association for the purpose of

controlling what kinds of products and services we provide to our animals.

 

In 1997, amid great fanfare, the American Veterinary Medical

Association (AVMA) announced that several transnational pharmaceutical

companies, along with a major animal food company had formed a

" strategic partnership " for the purpose of improving the financial

fortunes of the veterinary industry as a whole. This new partnership

is not just the same old corporate sponsorship at trade shows and

sporting competitions for advertising purposes, this is a serious

donation of $1 million or more a year plus assignment of personnel to

the newly-formed National Commission on Veterinary Economic Issues

(NCVEI) to assist in strategic planning to renovate the veterinary

business as a whole. NCVEI proudly lists its founding sponsors as

Bayer, Hill's Pet Nutrition, Merial (a joint venture of Aventis &

Merck), Novartis, Pfizer, and VPI Pet Insurance. Other regular

sponsors include Fort Dodge, CareCredit, and Western Veterinary

Conference. A minor coincidence in this new " strategic partnership " is

that the head of AVMA, who cut the deal, now is an employee of one of

the founding sponsors.

 

So, what do these " strategic partners " want to do? First off,

according to the 30-year-old international corporate watchdog group,

ETC Group, the fastest growing sector of animal pharmaceuticals is the

" companion animals " group. According to them, most of the leading

animal veterinary companies are subsidiaries of pharmaceutical or

pesticide firms. The desire of these companies is to move even more

deeply into the companion animal market because any drug which has

already been approved for human use by the FDA, only needs cosmetic

changes (i.e. new name, new color coating on the pill or a minor tweak

to the formula), and voila, you have a new 20-year patent lease on

life for that drug without going through the hassle of research and

development, much less the expense of hundreds of millions of dollars

in typical costs for creating a new drug.

 

Thanks to this new desire for Big Pharma to serve you, you will be

glad to know that your dog now has the opportunity to be diagnosed

with " separation anxiety " so he or she can obtain a prescription to a

cross-over drug first developed as a human antidepressant for

obsessive-compulsive behavior and now called `ClomiCalm " . According to

PetEducation.com, and the manufacturer, Novartis, even if you opt to

use ClomiCalm, you still must consult your vet or an animal

behaviorist to utilize behavior modification to resolve the

" separation anxiety " issue. In other words, the drug doesn't actually

cure the problem. Furthermore, you are advised to contact your vet if

your dog experiences sedation, dry mouth, increased heart rate,

weakness, pale gums, or collapses while taking the drug. Emergency

phone numbers to Animal Poison Hotlines are provided on the

PetEducation.com website.

 

According to Novartis Animal Health, there are about seven million

dogs in the US who suffer from " canine separation anxiety " .

 

Another crossover drug manufactured by Pfizer to treat symptoms of

Parkinson's disease in humans has now been re-named and is promoted

for dogs that suffer from a new disease called " cognitive dysfunction

syndrome " and other geriatric behavior problems. Another Big Pharma

dogdrug now in the pipeline includes a magic potion to treat " thunder

phobia " .

 

Big Pharma's first contribution to this new vet industry " strategic

partnership " was to invest in several market surveys, one called, " The

Brakke Study " and another called, " The Current and Future Market for

Veterinarians and Veterinary Medical Services in the United States " .

These studies were completed in 1998 and 1999, respectively. What they

found:

 

1. Vets don't make enough money

2. Large numbers of women in the profession don't make as much

money as their male counterparts

3. There is a demand for more vet services in nontraditional and

nonprivate practice areas

4. Delivery of services are fragmented and inefficient

5. Vets don't know how to run a profitable business

6. THERE ARE TOO MANY VETS SO THEY HAVE TO COOK UP NEW SERVICES TO

DRIVE UP THEIR INCOMES.

 

With all this Big Pharma ammunition, the entire North American vet

industry leadership jumped on board to form the National Commission on

Veterinary Economic Issues. One look at NCVEI's website revels exactly

how Big Pharma has begun to reach out to control what you can do with

your Fifi, Fido, and Flicka (horses are companion animals, too).

 

The structure of NCVEI has all the de rigueur " working groups " to pump

up the industry including a sponsoring council made up of 15 drug

industry representatives who, no doubt, are well-trained in strategic

planning as strategic planning is a high art for Big Pharma.

 

We can assume that part of Big Pharma's interest in taking over

control of the veterinary industry was prompted in order to curtail a

growing interest on the part of some vets use of natural therapies and

products for animals in order to meet the needs of their customers.

Under the auspices of the Task Force on Alternative and Complementary

Therapies established by the American Veterinary Medical Association,

from 1998 to 2001, a national survey was conducted to determine how to

define natural healing arts and to provide official guidelines as they

related to veterinary medical practice. Current vet practices are

basically the same modern medical products and services that MDs use

in treating humans.

 

Interestingly, the results of this study include a most sophisticated

understanding of the great philosophical divide between modern

medicine and natural world of healing.

 

" These guidelines define CAVM [complementary and alternative

veterinary medicine] as a heterogeneous group of hygienic, diagnostic,

and therapeutic philosophies and practices whose theoretical bases and

techniques diverge from modern scientific veterinary medicine. Some of

these differ in preferring naturally occurring hygienic and

therapeutic methods to synthetic drug treatment and surgery; some have

roots in ancient or modern philosophical or religious systems; some

are based on notions of anatomy, physiology, pathology, and

pharmacology that are not consistent with current knowledge; some are

based on principles that relate to an order of existence beyond the

visible, observable universe; and some are based on beliefs that

contradict established scientific principles and have little or no

scientific evidence of effectiveness and safety. " (Adapted from:

Medicine, alternative. In: Stedman's medical dictionary. 27th ed.

Baltimore " Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2000;1077.)

 

Concurrent with the Task Force guidelines project was the development

of a model law that is now being used by vet licensing boards in all

50 states to pass brutal anti-customer DVM monopoly laws that has only

one goal in mind, to protect and increase the incomes of veterinarians

and their Sugar Daddy, Big Pharma.

 

One of the results of the veterinary practice surveys is to justify

ways that vets could run more traffic through their clinics so that

they can collect more fees for more services. In an array of vet

industry magazines and various other means, DVMs are being told that

if they hire a lot of secondary support staff such as " vet techs " ,

they will be in a position to promote lab tests, preventative

evaluations and the like.

 

Vets are also being told to be more aggressive in recommending more

services and specifically capitalize on the emotional relationship the

owner has for his or her pet in order to exploit it for financial

gain. Yup. You read that right. Like we found with the Katrina

hurricane disaster, some people have such a close attachment to pets,

they won't desert them even at risk to their own lives. So, vets are

being encouraged to use this special bond as a tool to increase

services the owner may not want or really can't afford. In fact,

according to a March 2005 article in Veterinary Economics, vet schools

are now starting to train future vets in how to use this human-animal

bond as they develop their own practices that are now considered

" family practices " not just animal practices.

 

This notion to gather all services under one roof under the control of

veterinarians, is a basic monopoly move which the chiropractic

profession was quick to spot thanks to their own monopoly fights with

the American Medical Association that spanned nearly a century.

Knowing that chiropractic was of benefit to animals as well as humans,

the leadership of the American Chiropractic Association (ACA)

contacted the American Veterinary Medical Association in 1999 to

establish a dialogue. This effort was referred to the Task Force on

Complementary and Alternative Medicine. The result of this effort was

as follows:

 

" The Task Force met to consider what the ACA had offered, and

submitted its report to the AVMA House of Delegates. The AVMA then

adopted a policy that reiterated its position that only veterinarians

can perform procedures on non-human animals-unless these are performed

after a direct referral from, and conducted under the direct

supervision of, a DVM. This decision applies to all CAM [Complementary

And Alternative] procedures, not just chiropractic. "

 

To make sure you understand the implications of this policy, which is

being promoted in passage of new laws across the US, is that DVMs, who

have no knowledge, understanding, or training in any natural healing

art, have the right to tell YOU, the animal owner, what you can and

cannot do to help your animal.

 

PLEASE LET US REPEAT, the goal here is to CONTROL YOU and what YOU can

do for YOUR animal. It is not about the health and safety of the

animal. Since natural healing arts are extremely safe and the practice

of DVMs, as a modern medical healing art, has the potential of being

extremely risky and life threatening, vets have never publicly argued

safety as their justification for passage of DVM monopoly laws. They

can't.

 

The chiropractors, a very-well seasoned group who successfully beat

off total destruction as a profession by the AMA, saw the handwriting

on the wall and quickly cranked up their own system of credentialing

chiros in the fine art of animal chiropractic. This means there is a

fight going on in every legislature in the US over who is going to be

allowed to do chiropractic work on your pet.

 

Other practices, not normally considered natural healing arts in the

same breath like homeopathy, massage therapy, herbalism and dietary

supplementation, are also now in a duel to the death. Horse dentists,

whose profession dates back to 1207 AD, 600 years before the first

veterinary school, are now getting cease and desist orders in states

where they find themselves suddenly outlawed. Horse dentists

historically can spend up to 50 hours in training to learn the fine

art of " floating " (a.k.a. filing) horse teeth, while vet schools,

those who actually have some sort of training on this sort of thing,

average less than three hours. Similarly, farriery also known as horse

shoeing, another ancient art, which is learned often by

well-established journeyman programs, is now in danger of becoming

extinct. After all, the purpose of putting a shoe on a horse has to do

with establishing proper posture and movement so the structure of the

horse is well supported. In the crazy world of DVM monopoly, farriers

are now apparently practicing equine podiatry without a license.

 

As for the commonly-understood natural healing arts, the state of

Florida has actually defined what veterinarians, and only

veterinarians, are now legally-allowed to practice on your animals. We

are giving you the details so you can see how unbelievably ridiculous

the situation really is. Our comments follow the official Florida

definitions.

 

Acupressure: Applying pressure to specific energy points in the body

to promote optimum energy flow. It is a harmless touch therapy that

amounts to gently touching somebody. In this case, the Chinese believe

it relieves energy congestions in the body, which, once cleared,

restores normal energy balance and often relieves pain and spasms.

 

Aromatherapy: The use of volatile plant oils, including essential

oils, for psychological and physical well-being. In human use, these

are regulated as food if ingested. Most, however, are used

aromatically or as massage oils to enhance various aspects of the

human spirit and general health. A little lavender oil on a hanky was

commonly used to provide a calming effect on Victorian ladies. A few

drops of mint in a cup of tea is a nice pick-me-up. Or, just dab a bit

of either on your body so you can smell it and you get the same

benefits. Aromatherapy products are considered harmless,

over-the-counter products and have been used since ancient times in

many parts of the world.

 

Animal Communication: Interpreting the thoughts of an animal.

Biologist and wildlife expert, Marta Williams, in her book, " Learning

Their Language: Intuitive Communication With Animals and Nature " ,

details the history of this healing art and describes it as a

developed form of intuition. In addition, " animal communications "

could define horse whisperer, Monty Roberts, who is regularly brought

to England by Queen Elizabeth for public promotion of his art. Animal

whispering involves subliminal communication with animals. This

definition could also describe National Geographic Channel's, Cesar

Millan, owner of Cesar Millan's Dog Psychology Center of Los Angeles,

a self-styled dog psychologist who was also featured on Oprah when he

helped Oprah cure her dog, Sophie, of " separation anxiety " (in just a

few minutes and without the use of any drugs.)

 

Farriery: Trimming and placing shoes on horses' hooves. Most people

are more familiar with the terms " blacksmith " and " horseshoer " to

describe this trade.

 

Flower Essence Therapy: Ingestion of distilled extracts from flowers

to enhance emotional health. What this boils down to is a set of

formulas developed by Edward Bach, MD, a homeopath who practiced in

England in the early part of the 20th Century. Flower essences were

developed as over-the-counter products so that ordinary people,

consulting any number of books, could use them to ameliorate emotional

distresses. Flower essence therapists are people who hang out their

shingle so people can get advice on which flower formulas to take.

Flower essence dosage means two drops of a very diluted substance put

into a glass of water to be sipped or two drops dropped directly in

the mouth. Flower essences have been used worldwide for nearly 100

years without any reports of adverse reactions.

 

Homeopathy: The use of plant, mineral or other substances in minute,

diluted amounts to stimulate self-healing. Homeopathic products are

inexpensive, non-patentable products that have been available

over-the-counter and used round the world for nearly 200 years without

any reports of adverse reactions. Homeopathy is an energy medicine so

there is only a residue of molecular energy to be found in any

homeopathic remedy, which means there is no risk of chemical cocktail

effect even if taken with modern medical drugs. Since the 1870's, Big

Pharma has been on a campaign to claim homeopathy is so worthless it

doesn't work at all. The FDA has regulated these products since 1937.

 

Hands on Healing: Laying hands on the body to channel energy. There

are literally hundreds of different touch therapies that fit this

definition and for which training is available in the US and around

the world. Touch therapies provide direct communication with an animal

and can sooth a fearful or angry heart, relax tense and sore muscles

and provide any number of other improvements in the mind, body and

spirit. Hands on healing has been done on people and animals since

ancient times in all cultures.

 

Magnet Therapy: Using magnets to create a magnetic field that

increases circulation, oxygen utilization and energy flow. There are

various over-the-counter magnet products that can be used for this

purpose.

 

Nutritional Counseling: Offering advice about nutrition. In some cases

this means somebody who sells over-the-counter products who is trained

in explaining what the products are used for.

 

When a DVM monopoly law was passed in Oklahoma in 2003, it merely

added " complementary and alternative therapies " to the definitional

language of the law without spelling out what these words meant.

" Cease and desist " orders went out to anyone in Oklahoma or elsewhere

that the licensing board could find who they thought might come to

Oklahoma and that they decided was covered by the new DVM monopoly

law. Once news of the law became public, it threw the horse industry

into a major uproar as Oklahoma City has a $4.5 million–dollar-a year

horse show convention business and two race tracks in the state which

draw horses from across the US. The law also outlawed dozens of equine

massage therapists who had graduated from a state-licensed school of

equine massage therapy.

 

A " cease and desist " order also went out to an Oklahoma-based importer

and retail seller of over-the-counter British dietary supplements,

homeopathy and aromatherapy products repackaged for animal use. Thanks

to the new law, this business had to shut down its website, its

principle means of advertising its national business.

 

As with all states with DVM monopoly laws, horse people, in

particular, are put into a big bind, particularly if they show or race

their animals. Equine massage therapy is very big business as simple

massage techniques or any of the other touch therapies, possibly

combined with aromatherapy or flower essence therapy is the fastest,

cheapest and most effective way to keep a horse in top physical and

emotional health even under the rigors of being hauled all over the

countryside then pressed to the limit in competition. Many of these

horses are worth tens of thousands of dollars and their owners travel

to competitions with an entourage of trainers and handlers who

practice natural healing arts. Many drug therapies are illegal in the

equine performance world so use of natural products and services may

mean the difference between a healthy animal able to perform and an

injured animal that may also be suffering from lack of care.

 

To a horseperson, there is nothing worse than an " ouchy " horse that is

upset and not in the mood to cooperate. This is a potentially

dangerous situation for the horse and all the people around it

(property included) and to realize that Big Pharma, in its " strategic

partnership " with the vet industry to create a monopoly put the

partnership's financial interests ahead of basic safety. This shows

just how sorry this DVM monopoly game really is.

 

In another example of the sorry justification of this " strategic

partnership " , in the March 2005 issue of The Horse Gazette, holistic

DVM, Madalyn Ward, wrote a piece reviewing the cost differences

between using natural therapies when possible for a non-competing

trail horse that was ridden two to three times a week versus one using

strictly modern medical therapies over a period of a year. The cost

only differed $139 (natural was cheaper) but it was in the ability to

function that told the whole tale. The horse that had access to

natural therapies was sick only three days during the survey year

versus the horse only treated by modern medicine. That horse was sick

21 days that year.

 

During an attempt to restore direct access to natural healing

practitioners in Oklahoma, an access that had been available since

before statehood and which continues to be available BY LAW to parents

with children in need of all manner of similar natural therapies,

there were several excuses used to stall the bill in the legislature.

The most outrageous was the concern, expressed by one vet, that such

direct, unsupervised access might mean legalizing cruelty to animals.

We are convinced that this statement is nothing more than a

smokescreen to suggest that all DVM's want to do is " protect " animals

against harm.

 

The fact that no one has any recollection of any complaints filed

against a natural healing arts practitioner for any reason whatsoever

for either man or beast seems to have been missed. In addition, the

fact that DVMs' modern medicine brethren, MDs, do not act as

gatekeepers or, for that matter, have any regulatory authority over

any natural healing arts practice in the state, got ignored in the

argument, also.

 

In short, as the Oklahoma law now stands, any parent can legally take

a child to any natural healing arts practitioner in the state without

first getting permission from anybody to do so. Conversely, if this

same person takes a family pet to a practitioner for the same natural

healing arts services the child just received, that same person can be

thrown into jail for six months and fined $2,500, thanks to the new

DVM monopoly law. Does this make sense?

 

Out of the 1700 vets licensed to practice in Oklahoma only six

practice something called " holistic medicine " according to a national

holistic vet professional trade association and not all of them list a

full complement of holistic services. Instate veterinarian groups

don't keep any such lists. The state's veterinary college does not

offer courses in such services and it is pretty doubtful many other

vet schools in other states are going to go whole hog into the

business either.

 

This lack of commitment on the part of the veterinary medical industry

to provide natural healing arts is also reflected in the schedule of

seminars and symposiums at the national meeting of the Western

Veterinary Conference. This meeting is billed as the largest vet

convention in the United States and the Conference is one of the

" strategic partners " of the National Commission on Veterinary Economic

Issues. Last February, out of 800 seminars, symposiums and the like,

only 10 were devoted to " complementary " medicine, of which one was a

discussion on how animal owners could be taught to cook homemade dog

food. This year's conference has upped the schedule to 13

" complementary " medicine presentations.

 

In light of the fact the homemade dog food presentation isn't listed

this year, we have a recipe any natural nutritional counselor would

suggest for your dog -- one part steamed brown rice, one part lightly

steamed mixed vegetables, and one part lightly sautéed (as rare as

possible) (in extra virgin olive oil) lean turkey, chicken or beef.

But please don't send us any money for this nutritional advice. Elissa

would be thrown in jail and I'm not sure what the law is in New York

for people like me. I'm only an MD ND who has written lots of books

and articles about nutrition and other natural healing arts subjects.

 

The idiocy of these anti-animal-owner DVM monopoly laws should be

obvious. Both Elissa and I have in hand a document called " An Analysis

of Relative Risks and Levels of Risk in Canada " commissioned by one of

our Friends of Freedom International colleagues. Of the many findings

in this study, the most remarkable one is that the risk of dying in

Canada from using the services of natural health care providers and

using therapeutic products is 14 statistical deaths PER BILLION as

compared to an array of modern medical death statistics broken out by

each category per real deaths.

 

I wrote in detail about some of these risks in my book, Death by

Modern Medicine. As for putting animals at risk to the dangers of

modern medicine, I even wrote about an example of a crossover drug

that Pfizer, one of the members of the " strategic partnership " was so

anxious to sell. It was its animal arthritis pain killer drug,

Rimadyl, which was promoted through a Christmas card $10 discount

coupon campaign. Herb, a male Weimaraner owned by the host of the

radio show Elissa is on every Saturday (see her bio, below), received

not one but several of these cards. Rimadyl, a Vioxx-type drug had big

problems from the get go. According to a report put together by The

Senior Dog Project, The FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine reported

that by May 1, 2003, 2,133 dogs had died as a result of using Rimadyl

since its introduction in 1997.

 

An even more alarming article published in USA Today reported that

through November of 2004, the FDA received almost 13,000 adverse-event

reports about Rimadyl, which was much higher than any other dog pain

reliever. USA Today also reported that another dog drug in the same

Vioxx-type class as Rimadyl, is Dermamaxx, developed by another of the

American Veterinary Medical Association's " strategic partners " ,

Novartis. Since its launch in 2002, the FDA has had 2,813 adverse

event reports including 630 deaths.

 

The market for dog arthritis pain meds tops $130 million a year and,

according to USA Today, it is growing about 13% a year. However

according to the FDA, 3,200 dogs have died and records show there have

been almost 19,000 adverse reaction to them.

 

These are not the only reports about animal drugs and vaccines that

are alarming, but they should represent a vivid reminder that if you

have a companion animal, you have just been put into a bind…..do right

by your pet and risk jail time and a fine, or allow the local vet to

treat your animal pal in a way you think might be too risky for you if

you and the rest of your family are a regular users of natural healing

arts products and services. IF you think these DVM-monopoly laws

stink, there are several things you can do about it.

 

1. Contact Illinois Alliance For Animal Owners Rights to find out what

the situation is in your state. www.iaaor.org/home.html This group's

website has lots of key information you need to know along with a list

of state contacts.

 

2. If your state does not have an animal owners rights group, contact

National Health Freedom Coalition. www.nationalhealthfreedom.org This

group has affiliated health freedom groups in 40 states and if your

state is one of them, these folks may be able to help you protect your

rights as what they are doing for health freedom is directly related

to animal owners rights. See below for details on the international

health freedom meeting these folks are hosting starting October 27.

You may want to attend.

 

3. Send a copy of this article (and other information like it) to your

state legislators. They need to know what the real story is regarding

DVM-monopoly laws.

 

 

 

 

 

Join us at the National Conference for Health Freedom Advocates and

World Health Freedom Assembly

October 28-30, 2005

Minneapolis, Minnesota

www.nationalhealthfreedom.org

 

ACT FOR HEALTH FREEDOM NOW: Go to

www.friendsoffreedominternational.org and purchase " Death by Modern

Medicine " and view and purchase the new movie on Codex and Free Trade

called " We Become Silent " by Kevin Miller. Proceeds from the sale of

these products are crucial to help fund our health freedom action. For

state action go to www.nationalhealthfreedom.org.

 

© 2005 Carolyn Dean -

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