PDA

View Full Version : UPDATE on tainted pet food....RAT POISOIN!!!



slater
03-23-2007, 09:36 PM
ALBANY, N.Y.(AP) Rat poison was found in pet food blamed for the deaths of at least 17 cats and dogs, but scientists said Friday they still don't know how it got there and predicted more animal deaths would be linked to it.

After the announcement, the company that produced the food expanded its recall to include all 95 brands of the "cuts and gravy" style food, regardless of when they were produced. The company also said it would take responsibility for pet medical expenses incurred as a result of the food.

The substance in the food was identified as aminopterin, a cancer drug that once was used to induce abortions in the United States and is still used to kill rats in some other countries, state Agriculture Commissioner Patrick Hooker said.

The federal government prohibits using aminopterin for killing rodents in the U.S. State officials would not speculate on how the poison got into the pet food, but said no criminal investigations had been launched.

The pet deaths led to a recall of 60 million cans and pouches of dog and cat food produced by Menu Foods and sold throughout North America under 95 brand names. Some pets that ate the recalled brands suffered kidney failure, and the company has confirmed the deaths of 15 cats and two dogs.

The latest death, a Yorkshire terrier named Pebbles, occurred Thursday. The dog died of kidney failure after eating some of the food. Her owner, Jeff Kerner, said he was contacting an attorney because he wanted to prevent another pet tragedy.

"Before they put this stuff in the bags, there should be some kind of test," said Kerner, of Sherman Oaks, Calif. "I can't just let it go. Even if they just change the law."

The company expanded the recall _ which initially covered only cans and pouches of food packaged from Dec. 3 through March 6 _ after the FDA alerted it that some products remained on store shelves.

There is no risk to pet owners from handling the food, officials said.

The Food and Drug Administration has said the investigation into the pet deaths was focused on wheat gluten in the food. The gluten itself would not cause kidney failure, but it could have been contaminated, the FDA said.

Paul Henderson, chief executive of Ontario, Canada-based Menu Foods, confirmed Friday that the wheat gluten was purchased from China.

Bob Rosenberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the National Pest Management Association, said it would be unusual for the wheat to be tainted.

"It would make no sense to spray a crop itself with rodenticide," Rosenberg said, adding that grain shippers typically put bait stations around the perimeter of their storage facilities.

Scientists at the New York State Animal Health Diagnostic Center at Cornell University and at the New York State Food Laboratory tested three cat food samples provided by the manufacturer and found aminopterin in two of them. The two labs are part of a network created after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to keep the nation's animals and food supply safe.

"Any amount of this product is too much in food," Hooker said.

Aminopterin is highly toxic in high doses. It inhibits the growth of malignant cells and suppresses the immune system. In dogs and cats, the amount of aminopterin found _ 40 parts per million _ can cause kidney failure, according to Bruce Akey, director of Cornell's diagnostic center.

"It's there in substantial amounts," Akey said.

Donald Smith, dean of Cornell's veterinary school, said he expected the number of pet deaths to increase. "Based on what we've heard the last couple days, 16 is a low number," Smith said.

Aminopterin is no longer marketed as a cancer drug, but is still used in research, said Andre Rosowsky, a chemist with the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Rosowsky speculated that the substance would not show up in pet food "unless somebody put it there."

Henderson said Menu Foods does not believe the food was tampered with because the recalled food came from two different plants, one in Kansas, one in New Jersey. Menu continues to produce food at the two plants.

The company, already facing lawsuits, said Friday it is testing all the ingredients that go into the food.

"We have a lot of work to do, and we are eager to get back to it," Henderson said. "This is a highly unusual substance."

When asked whether there would compensation for medical bills for sick pets, Henderson said "to the extent that we identify that the cause of any expenses incurred are related to the food, Menu will take responsibility for that."

A complete list of the recalled products along with product codes, descriptions and production dates was posted online by Menu Foods and is available at http://tinyurl.com/2pn6mm. The company also designated two phone numbers that pet owners could call for information: (866) 463-6738 and (866) 895-2708.

___

Associated Press writers Andrew Bridges in Washington, Michael Virtanen in Albany and Solvej Schou in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

FDA pet food recall information: http://www.fda.gov/oc/opacom/hottopics/petfood.html

Menu Foods: http://tinyurl.com/2pn6mm

Binky
03-23-2007, 10:16 PM
Thanks for the snip slater,:)

I heard the lawsuits have allready been filed in the US, don't know about Can yet.

Raoul Duke
03-23-2007, 10:53 PM
After reading this I decided to post a blog my lifemate posted about this a couple of days ago.


My Favorite. The reason I can sleep at night. The Boy and I were originally debating between Iams, Eukanuba and Science Diet, until I ran across this unfamiliar brand… it had the lowest ash content (and as we have a male cat, and I grew up back when ash actually was an issue, I was insistent upon this…) and the tastiest-looking kitten flavors (most stores don’t carry much selection for kitten-specific food) so we grabbed it, along with a healthy assortment of wet foods for the little rugrat’s supper.
Shit..! I had three of the recalled brands (though not products, somewhat thankfully), Iams, Nutro Max and Hill’s (Science Diet) in our cupboards as a result of the wet food purchase… I chucked the last Nutro we had left… fortunately, the Spa Select dry food that makes up our feline’s main diet is safe and its his favorite… (ps- its also the only one that actually smells like real food when I open up the can, instead of that familiar pate-puke stink that comes with most of the other brands...)

http://www.bluebuff.com/products/cats_kittens.shtml Some further reading about Lando’s current brand of choice… I love their “cold-form” idea… very innovative…

http://www.diamondpet.com/faq/#51 Some helpful FAQs from another non-Menu Foods pet food producer… (whoa… even these guys aren’t innocent… back in ’05, their dry food was found to have been contaminated by a certain mould…)


The cat’s out of the bag on one of the nastier secrets that lurks in the aisles of grocery stores and taints the reputations of otherwise reputable pet product suppliers.
http://www.menufoods.com/recall/
http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/story.html?id=f515608e-a467-4ec0-a00c-331093c93e9d&k=10663


Contract production.

No, I’m not talking about a venereal disease. I’m talking about the average corporation’s basic progression in cost-cutting strategies… the obvious move towards outsourcing production to factory companies, so that initial cost and set-up is absorbed by the factories other ongoing operations, labour costs are more widely districuted, yada yada, and the corporation is left with a bunch of free manpower and capital to dump into more extensive marketing and research… holy shit, am I ever glad I didn’t end up in Business Admin. I’d be dead by now.


Now… this is one basis for economic concern in regards to retail brands and distributors using contract production methods, as opposed to smaller, non-corporate farms which tend to be more specialized (therefore increasing product quality and diversity). Below, you can see The American Hog version of what happens when companies like Iams and Safeway contract out their manufacturing to a large scale factory producer. Just replace “hog” with “cat food” for our purposes here… (producers and manufacturers are the guys who mix and make the product [Menu Foods, Cargill] and the merchandisers and distributors are the companies that may design, package or sell the product [Purina, Safeway].
More hogs may or may not result in more quality employment opportunities. A recent Special Report prepared by the Center for Rural Affairs in Walthill, NE, from USDA Statistics shows that between 1986 and 1993, the state of North Carolina more than doubled their hog numbers, increasing from 2.40 to 5.25 million head (Center for Rural Affairs and USDA, 1993). North Carolina's national ranking among states in hog production rose from 7th in 1986 to 3rd by 1993. However, during this same period, the number of North Carolina hog producers dropped by nearly half, from about 15,000 in 1986 to 8,000 by 1993. During North Carolina's dramatic rise in national rank nearly half of its hog farmers got out of the business.
While these two trends might at first seem contradictory, the results should not be surprising. North Carolina's rise is national rank has been linked to its leadership role in large-scale, corporate and contract hog production. Large-scale confinement hog operations reduce total costs by using production methods which allow fewer people to produce more hogs. The substitution of capital and mass-production technologies for labor and management is the primary advantage that large, specialized hog production units have over smaller, diversified operations.
The production environment in large-scale operations is controlled through utilization of buildings and equipment that require large capital investments but greatly reduce labor requirements. Production technologies associated with large-scale, contract production also change the basic nature of the management function. Mass-production technologies (which standardize genetic selection, breeding, feeding, herd health, and marketing functions) transfer most of the management function from on-site hog producers to corporate production supervisors who travel among production units; and to an even greater extent, to production managers back in corporate headquarters who design and refine production strategies. Large-scale, specialized hog production replaces people with capital intensive, mass-production technologies and centralized management.
http://www.ssu.missouri.edu/faculty/jikerd/papers/con-hog.htm (the full, undiluted and very difficult to stay awake through, let alone understand, if’n ya wanna have a gander…)


The human, or animal, welfare concern in our latest systemic (systematic) failure is obvious… http://www.abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=2963443&page=1 …I mean, jesus, can you imagine… the fuzzy little kitten you purchased last month, or your bestest-best canine buddy that you’ve had since you were 12… quits eating, starts acting all mopey and lethargic… you take the sick thing to your vet… only to find out your four-footed pal is experiencing renal failure.
http://www.sniksnak.com/cathealth/renal.html feline renal failure
http://www.gopetsamerica.com/dog-health/dog-kidney-failure.aspx canine renal failure
more about renal failure (in humans) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renal_failure


Certainly not pleasant for the animal, to say the least… but for some unlucky, it proves fatal.


Makes a person wonder how far it goes… I mean, we all know that all those basic and small day-to-day personal hygiene items we use- like shampoos, soaps, detergents- are all probably ultimately manufactured by the same two or three producers and then supplied to Walmart or Shopper’s or wherever. Most of us probably buy no-name or store brand when it comes to these things anyway… I mean, with obvious exceptions, most of us probably just buy whatever’s the cheapest, unless it happens to fall under the “personal preference” category (I just can’t buy no-name Kraft Dinner…).

So, while we’re all packing our carts with our Safeway Select paper towels, and our Purina cat litter, and our No-Name popsicles, and our brand name Kraft Dinner… it all makes a person wonder who in the world we’re actually giving our hard-earned dollars to… what countries and policies are we really supporting with our wallets?



This organization is trying to pressure companies like Safeway to stop purchasing their salmon supplies from factory-style fish farms that are currently operating with less than environmentally friendly practices (ie. they’re killing off the local wild salmon). http://www.farmedanddangerous.org/

Here’s a story involving Kimberley-Clark, makers of the rich man’s face-wipe, Kleenex, and their reluctance to increase their use of recycled paper materials… http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/253971_paper30.html Ah-ha ha!! Safeway Select appears as a red-light, environmental offender on this list as well! Huh. I might just have to rethink how and where I shop… (when I have money, of course… for now, I’m locked in the ugly cycle of low prices/low wages that seems to be driving this province’s professional potential into the ground…)


Anyways. I’m tired and I’m sure there’s something half-decent on the cable box by now, so I’ll end my corporate tirade with a few notes on the lighter side of human/animal interaction…

http://justjared.buzznet.com/2007/03/12/sarah-michelle-gellar-tmnt/
Vampire slayer turned reporter-cum-mutant-turtle-groupie… did I say that right..? Buffy’s playing April O’Neil in the exciting new tMNt movie…

http://nexus404.com/Blog/2007/01/19/severed-horse-head-pillow/ Morbid AND hilarious!!

http://ifc.com/series?aId=18009 Greg the Bunny webisodes… (don’t ruin any of them for me… I can barely see the computer screen as it is, so I’m sticking it out til’ the DVD release…)


over and out…


Basises

claude_zachary420
03-23-2007, 10:55 PM
Interesting thing about this particular rat poison. It is used in Europe legally for that purpose. It is banned in the USA for that purpose. It is however used in the USA as a cancer drug. Yeah, im serious.

claude_zachary420
03-23-2007, 10:57 PM
I spose i shouldnt have skipped that line when reading. Grrrrr. :rolleyes: