RMB Newsletter Vol 5:2 A debilitating case of disinformation

Dear Reader,

Hope this edition of the RMB Newsletter finds you in good form, fighting
the good fight.

The cover story, A debilitating case of disinformation, sheds some light
on the emerging pet-food industry/veterinary involvement with the medical
profession. I hope that you can make use of the links at the bottom of
the article to let the authorities know your opinions.

There’s some good news too.

The UK Raw Meaty Bones Support & Action group is doing terrific work
exposing the pet-food industry/veterinary alliance. The recently revamped
website www.ukrmb.co.uk contains chilling reminders of veterinary
attitudes and incompetence.

News from the US reported in the Sydney Morning Herald June 27, 2005
tells of pet-owners suing veterinarians for malpractice: ‘In Florida, for
example, Adam Riff is suing a vet for alleged negligence because his
sheepdog, Lucky, died after dental surgery. . . The biggest damages award
so far for veterinary malpractice is $US39,000 granted to Marc Bluestone
by a jury in Orange County, California, last year. His sandy-haired dog,
Shane - bought for $US100 at a local shelter - died of liver failure
following a misdiagnosis and $21,000 worth of treatment.’

What penalties will courts impose on vets for promoting and selling junk
pet food, the source of most dental and liver disease? What defense will
vets employ in an attempt to justify injuring their patients’ health and
misleading their clients? I hope that you can spread the word, even
launch a legal action. That way we may get some answers.

Wishing you and your animals the best of good health,

Tom Lonsdale

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A DEBILITATING CASE OF DISINFORMATION
__________________________________________________________________________

We can, or at least should be able to learn from our mistakes and the
bigger the mistakes the bigger the lessons. For too long we’ve failed to
unite the medical, dental and veterinary professions under the banner
of ‘one medicine’ for the benefit of all Earth’s inhabitants. But before
embarking on such a noble cause we need to investigate and resolve a
debilitating case of disinformation.

A majority of veterinarians in the western world depend on junk food
induced ill health of pets and the sale of junk food in their waiting
rooms. Veterinary schools, propped-up by pet-food money, program their
students to ignore the origins of the dietary disease epidemics; to
disparage healthy natural diets and to promote junk food at every
opportunity. Veterinary associations fill their journals with pet-food
propaganda whilst barring healthy discussion of healthy options.
Effectively, then, the veterinary profession acts as a marketing arm of
the junk pet-food industry.

And effective marketing it is too. The public have been duped,
governments have been duped and now it seems it’s the medical
profession’s turn to be recruited into the scam. According to a 16 April
2005 editorial in the journals of both the British Medical Association
and the British Veterinary Association: ‘The BMJ and the Veterinary
Record plan simultaneous publication of theme issues exploring how the
two professions can collaborate for mutual benefit.’ After listing SARS,
potential bioterrorist attack and antimicrobial resistance as subjects
warranting a joint approach the British Medical Journal promotes pet
keeping and the Pet Food Manufacturers’ Association web site:
---------------------------------------------------------------
'With increasing urbanisation we can easily forget the extent to which
people depend on animals. In the developing world many people rely on
animals for food and transport (whether of people or goods)—and the
health of those animals can mean the difference between life and death.
Closer to home, livestock are important economically but animals are also
a source of companionship. Half of all households in the United Kingdom
own a pet (www.pfma.com/public/petownership_stats.htm), and many pets are
just as important as a family member or friend, sometimes more; for them,
the same level of health care is expected. Cost of treatment and
subsequent quality of life is an issue for the care of animals and humans.

Doctors may not fully appreciate the importance of the relationship
between owners and their animals. This may be relevant when, for example,
advising immunocompromised patients of any risk from their pets, or
considering the implications of taking an elderly pet owner into care in
an environment where animals are banned. When advising patients about
owning pets, doctors now have to weigh up the risks of developing
allergies.'
--------------------------------------------------------------

Following the BMJ exhortations will doctors copy the vets and sell junk
pet food to their patients? No, it’s unlikely. If doctors collaborate
with and thus endorse vets they will automatically join the protective
cordon around the junk pet-food industry.

• Due to concerns about possible transmission of disease from pets
many doctors express reservations about pet keeping. If medical
opposition can be deflected and converted into enthusiastic acceptance
then pet-food sales will rise — hence the establishment of
university ‘research’ into the human animal bond and lavish international
conferences funded by the junk pet-food industry.

• For many years the tobacco industry escaped scrutiny in part
because the industry bought innocence by association with the medical
profession. As a strategy for buying time it worked well. Huge revenue
was generated before the doctors finally woke-up to their involvement
with disease promotion. For the junk pet-food industry, with annual
revenues of $30 billion, positive comments (and absence of negative
comments) in medical journals are priceless.

• The veterinary profession avoids research that might reflect
badly on the junk food producers. Independent medical and dental
researchers, if they knew the scope and potential for new research of
benefit to man and animals, could fill the void. However, if the junk
food/veterinary alliance maintains the fiction that all is well and under
control it’s less likely that independent-minded medical researchers will
venture onto veterinary turf.

• If the proposals, as published in the BMJ, come to fruition then
research teams of vets and doctors will likely become more common — and
it could be that the funds will come from confectionary giants Mars and
Nestlé, the world’s biggest junk pet-food producers. Research funds buy
silence, a precious commodity for junk food companies wanting to limit
knowledge of dietary disease affecting man and animals.

As citizens, doctors can join with the rest of us in decrying the mass
cruelty of forcing pets to consume products known to give rise to serious
ill health and death. Doctors may be appalled at the economic costs and
waste of resources, both human and environmental, which arise from the
junk pet-food industry. But it’s in the area of human health that doctors
are uniquely qualified and responsible for protecting the interests of
their patients.

In subtle and not so subtle ways the junk pet-food industry injures human
health. Let’s take a look at what’s known and in need of attention.

DOG BITES
In the USA there are almost 5 million dog bites every year — over 13,000
every day. Extrapolated worldwide that’s a considerable problem and for
individuals it can be devastating. Children are often victims and often
suffer bites to the face.

In almost every case the dog is fed junk food. The question arises: Was
the diet the main factor influencing the dog’s behavior, a contributory
factor or not a factor at all? We can say that dogs fed junk food tend to
be excitable and harder to train. One significant trial found some Golden
Retrievers, normally a docile breed, attacked their owners when fed junk
food, but became docile when fed cooked lamb and rice. How might the dogs
have behaved if fed on raw natural food? Objective research is now an
urgent priority; thousands of victims every day need answers.

WORKING DOGS
Human health and welfare sometimes depends on dog health — for instance
the health of assistance dogs, search and rescue dogs and bomb detection
dogs. As we know, dogs fed junk food are seldom truly healthy and
consequently perform below par.

Researchers studied a group of beagles that, over a period of months,
suffered from a progressive accumulation of dental tartar and
simultaneously lost the ability to detect odors. The dogs’ teeth were
cleaned and within one day their odor detecting abilities returned to
normal. Imagine the consequences if a junk-food-fed dog, its teeth
encrusted with tartar, failed to detect a terrorist bomb. (RMB Newsletter
4:2 www.rawmeatybones.com)

HUMAN ANXIETY
The pet-food industry spends lots of money on advertisements, on
university departments and international symposia promoting the
unqualified notion that dogs are good for human health and wellbeing.

In April 2004 The Sydney Morning Herald reported a study:
--------------------------------------------------------------
'Older Australians who own a pet are more likely to be depressed and in
poorer physical health than people who don't own pets, according to a
major new Australian study. Flying in the face of claims from the pet-
food industry, and others, the study shows pet ownership confers no
health benefits to older people.' [Parslow RA, et al, Gerontology, 2005
Jan-Feb;51(1):40-7]
--------------------------------------------------------------
Could this compromised mental and physical health be due, at least in
part, to the ill health of pets maintained on commercial diets? Could it
be due to the worry associated with escalating vet bills?

IMMUNE SYSTEM DEPRESSION
In 1995 the Journal of Small Animal Practice, journal of the British
Small Animal Veterinary Association, published results of my research on
dogs and cats affected by immune deficiency and diet-induced periodontal
disease. By cleaning the teeth and changing the diets the animals’ immune
systems bounced back to a much healthier state. (Lonsdale T, JSAP 1995
36, 542-546) The implications for immune system research in general, AIDS
research in particular and wider aspects of animal and human health are
immense.

Rather than promote further inquiry the Editor of the Journal of Small
Animal Practice bowed to pressure from angry veterinarians and banned
discussion within the pages of the Journal. The Editor also revoked
written undertakings and prevented re-publication of the paper — thus
stopping a wider readership from learning about and acting on the
implications.

The veterinary research community enjoys many privileges; they also have
obligations. When published research challenges established beliefs or
has the potential to transform the lives of millions researchers need to
promptly repeat the work to verify or refute the new information. In
2002, seven years after publication of the original paper, Professor Tony
Buffington, a spokesperson for American veterinary researchers,
stated: ‘I’ve seen the paper. I haven’t seen it reproduced by anyone
anywhere else.’ (Radio Interviews, www.rawmeatybones.com)

DOGS IN MEDICAL RESEARCH
New medical treatments and pharmaceuticals are often tested on dogs
before use on humans. Dogs used in medical research are invariably fed
junk food. I mentioned to one researcher, who was working on a new anti-
inflammatory drug, that most dogs fed commercial food are suffering from
gum inflammation (known to be linked to heart disease, stroke, cancer and
Alzheimer’s) and that my research showed that the so called normal blood
values could not be relied upon. He shrugged and said his research team
used more dogs in each experiment to help compensate for statistical
errors!

UNEXPLORED OPPORTUNITIES
The junk pet-food industry and its allies insist that dogs fed processed
food are the healthiest; whereas the opposite is the case. Dogs are
subject to a range of illnesses like ourselves — diabetes, arthritis,
kidney disease and cancer — and often show dramatic health improvements
when switched from junk food to a natural diet. Why do previously sick,
debilitated animals, in the space of a few days, become ‘like puppies
again’? The question needs to be asked because the biological mechanisms
could have dramatic implications for human diets and health.

There are enough known junk pet-food issues to mobilize an army of
medical and dental researchers working in collaboration with
veterinarians. First, though, veterinarians must desist from their folly,
they must turn their backs on their pet-food paymasters and resolve to
atone for past mistakes. The doctors and their journals could play a
valuable part. They could help transform the health of the veterinary
profession and thus provide the foundations for a medical, dental and
veterinary collaboration — for the benefit of all Earth’s inhabitants.
__________________________________________________________________________

The full British Medical Journal 16 April 2005 article, Human and
veterinary medicine, can be found at:
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/330/7496/858

There’s a ‘Rapid Response’ link that enables you to tell the BMJ of your
experiences and concerns. To contact BMJ editors directly click on ‘Home’
and then ‘Contact Us’.

British politicians are starting to take an interest in the pet-food
industry/veterinary shenanigans.

You can find details of British MPs at:

http://www.locata.co.uk/commons/

Letters addressed to an MP’s constituency office or to Parliament House
are best and email messages are OK.

To fax British MPs go to:

http://www.faxyourmp.com/

Tell MPs (and political representatives of any state or nation) about the
pet-food industry/veterinary alliance that harms our pets whilst
purporting to do the opposite. Let them know about the efforts to recruit
human doctors to the pet-food scam. However, if you are stuck for words
or need help please contact the folks at info@ukrmb.co.uk

PLEASE PROVIDE US WITH COPIES OF CORRESPONDENCE FOR POSSIBLE FUTURE
PUBLICATION.

Many thanks.

Best wishes,

Tom Lonsdale

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Please circulate, distribute or reproduce this newsletter as you wish.
___________________________________________________________

The Raw Meaty Bones Newsletter is published by:

Tom Lonsdale
Rivetco P/L
PO Box 6096
Windsor Delivery Centre
NSW 2756
Australia

Phone: +61 2 4574 0537
Email: rivetco@rawmeatybones.com
Web: http://www.rawmeatybones.com

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