The truth about (pet) food!

We are what we eat! A sobering assessment of the food industry this Friday, the 13th!

This saying, which has been around for some time, reminds us that the foods we eat break down into elements that our bodies absorb. What we eat literally becomes part of us, and not just us humans but our dogs and cats as well.  That’s why I haven’t differentiated between us humans and our pets in this Post.

Let’s start off with our pets.

On the 28th December, just a couple of weeks ago, I wrote an article about the possible harm to dogs from Jerky treats coming in to the USA from China.  Kenneth Bryant of TriPom Chews added a comment that included a link to a news story about 353 dogs possibly being made sick.  Since then he and I have been in email correspondence including Ken passing the web address of Susan Thixton’s website Truth about Pet Food.  If you have a pet, go to this website!

I’m sure Susan wouldn’t mind me giving you a flavour (pardon the pun!) of what she has on this important website.  Try this.

Is there Chicken in Chicken Pet Foods?

One of the newest trends of pet food marketing is a tag line something like ‘Chicken is the first ingredient’.  Sounds good doesn’t it?  Chicken, first or second on the ingredient list surely means this pet food contains lots of quality meat doesn’t it?  No wonder this ‘chicken’ pet food is a little more expensive – it contains more meat.  Right?  Maybe not.

Just because petsumers think meat when the ingredient ‘chicken’ is listed on a label, doesn’t mean the pet food actually contains chicken meat.  Pet food can have a very different definition of ‘chicken’.  Thanks to very broad Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) ingredient definitions, the ingredient ‘chicken’ listed on a pet food label could be nothing more than skin, bone, cartilage, and maybe a few tiny fragments of meat.

Here is the AAFCO definition of poultry (quoting the 2011 AAFCO Official Publication): “Poultry is the clean combination of flesh and skin with or without accompanying bone, derived from the parts or whole carcasses of poultry or a combination thereof, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet and entrails.  It shall be suitable for use in animal food.  If it bears a name descriptive of its kind, it must correspond thereto.”

Problems with this pet food ingredient definition…
#1  This ingredient (which includes all types of poultry including chicken) can be “a combination thereof” of any part of poultry.  This means that a pet food, proudly claiming Chicken as the #1 ingredient, can include ONLY chicken bones and/or skin (left over from the human food industry).

#2  “It shall be suitable for use in animal food” means that animals rejected for use in human food for reasons including (but not limited to) disease and drug residues are approved for use in pet food.  This we can thank the FDA for.  Federal Food Safety Laws should make it illegal for pet food to include whole or parts of diseased or rejected animals, but FDA Compliance Policies tell pet food it is acceptable to use diseased and drugged animals in pet food [My emboldening, PH.] (“it shall be suitable for use in animal food”).

Chicken Meal/Poultry Meal is very similarly defined – except ‘meal’ implies moisture removed.  However the very same end result can apply – the meal can consist of little more than skin and bones — no meat.

Other pet food meat ingredient definitions are a bit more descriptive, however all meat pet food ingredient definitions include the “it shall be suitable for use in animal food” disclaimer.  Thus any pet food meat ingredient – thanks to FDA Compliance Policies and AAFCO ingredient definitions – can be the same quality as human meats or can be sourced from diseased, rejected animals.  But, regulations do NOT provide petsumers with a means to determine which is which.

Read the rest of this article on Susan’s website.  Even better subscribe to her newsletters.

I could go on and on but will close this section by saying ‘thanks’ to Ken of TriPom for providing this awareness of what we all may be feeding our beloved cats and dogs.

So, humans next!

Just a few days ago there was an article on The Atlantic magazine website about The Very Real Danger of Genetically Modified Foods.  It’s a detailed article that, nonetheless, needs to be read by the widest possible audience.  Here are some extracts,

Chinese researchers have found small pieces of ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the blood and organs of humans who eat rice. The Nanjing University-based team showed that this genetic material will bind to proteins in human liver cells and influence the uptake of cholesterol from the blood.

The type of RNA in question is called microRNA, due to its small size. MicroRNAs have been studied extensively since their discovery ten years ago, and have been linked to human diseases including cancer, Alzheimer’s, and diabetes. The Chinese research provides the first example of ingested plant microRNA surviving digestion and influencing human cell function.

Should the research survive scientific scrutiny, it could prove a game changer in many fields. It would mean that we’re eating not just vitamins, protein, and fuel, but information as well.

Later on the article says,

Monsanto’s claim that human toxicology tests are unwarranted is based on the doctrine of “substantial equivalence.” This term is used around the world as the basis of regulations designed to facilitate the rapid commercialization of genetically engineered foods, by sparing them from extensive safety testing.

According to substantial equivalence, comparisons between GM and non-GM crops need only investigate the end products of DNA translation: the pizza, as it were. “There is no need to test the safety of DNA introduced into GM crops. DNA (and resulting RNA) is present in almost all foods,” Monsanto’s website reads. “DNA is non-toxic and the presence of DNA, in and of itself, presents no hazard.”

The Chinese RNA study threatens to blast a major hole in that claim. It means that DNA can code for microRNA, which can, in fact, be hazardous.

And the closing two paragraphs,

The OECD’s 34 member nations could be described as largely rich, white, developed, and sympathetic to big business. The group’s current mission is to spread economic development to the rest of the world. And while that mission has yet to be accomplished, OECD has helped Monsanto spread substantial equivalence to the rest of the world, selling a lot of GM seed along the way.

The news that we’re ingesting information as well as physical material should force the biotech industry to confront the possibility that new DNA can have dangerous implications far beyond the products it codes for. Can we count on the biotech industry to accept the notion that more testing is necessary? Not if such action is perceived as a threat to the bottom line.

Please read the whole article as my extracts do not give justice to the importance of these findings.

Finally, let me turn to a recent item on the BBC website about the decline of brain function from as soon as age 45!  (I’m 67!)  The item starts,

The brain’s ability to function can start to deteriorate as early as 45, suggests a study in the British Medical Journal.

University College London researchers found a 3.6% decline in mental reasoning in women and men aged 45-49.

What caught my eye were these concluding paragraphs,

Dr Simon Ridley, head of research at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said he wanted to see similar studies carried out in a wider population sample.

He added: “Previous research suggests that our health in mid-life affects our risk of dementia as we age, and these findings give us all an extra reason to stick to our New Year’s resolutions.

“Although we don’t yet have a sure-fire way to prevent dementia, we do know that simple lifestyle changes – such as eating a healthy diet, not smoking, and keeping blood pressure and cholesterol in check – can all reduce the risk of dementia.”

Professor Lindsey Davies, president of the Faculty of Public Health, said that people should not wait until their bodies and minds broke down before taking action.

“We need only look at the problems that childhood obesity rates will cause if they are not addressed to see how important it is that we take ‘cradle to grave’ approach to public health.”

Let me repeat this sentence, “we do know that simple lifestyle changes – such as eating a healthy diet, not smoking, and keeping blood pressure and cholesterol in check – can all reduce the risk of dementia.”

Understanding what food is healthy for us and our animals ought to be straightforward.  But it’s not, when one understands the terrible lack of integrity in the industries that make our food!

7 thoughts on “The truth about (pet) food!

  1. I felt myself wise taking on the eating philosophy that the lower on the food chain my food came from, the safer I was.
    Guess that’s not true any longer.
    Thanks to Montsanto, I now expose myself to toxins that destroy the information systems of my body.
    Chilling!
    It’s difficult to not feel hopeless, but I will continue to attempt to find an answer. Landreth seed company (http://www.landrethseeds.com/) has heirloom seeds. I’m also hoping to try native foods from the Arizona desert such as mesquite, prickly pear and squash. (Check out Desert Harvesters: http://www.desertharvesters.org/resourceslinks/).
    As Hippocrates said, “Let your food be your medicine and your medicine your food.”
    No truer words have ever been spoken. We just have to work harder to find pure food.
    Thank you Paul for the thought provoking post.
    Cheers!
    Michele

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  2. As it happens the BBC have a piece today on their news website, as follows:

    A link between eating processed meat, such as bacon or sausages, and pancreatic cancer has been suggested by researchers in Sweden.

    They said eating an extra 50g of processed meat, approximately one sausage, every day would increase a person’s risk by 19%.

    But the chance of developing the rare cancer remains low.

    The World Cancer Research Fund suggested the link may be down to obesity.

    Eating red and processed meat has already been linked to bowel cancer. As a result the UK government recommended in 2011 that people eat no more than 70g a day.

    Read the rest of the article here http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-16526695

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  3. That what people put inside themselves has an effect on their heads, there is no doubt. Alcohol, smoke, trans-fats are all terrible… I avoid them all.
    The much talked about study on “cognitive” decline suffers from philosophical naivety at the semantic level. That they measured some stuff, no doubt. But their interpretation is silly.
    Notice in passing, making a trans-“cohort” they warn against, one observes a 35% decline in reasoning between 40 and 70 years of age. As I pointed out in my latest set of aphorisms, http://patriceayme.wordpress.com/2012/01/11/aphorism-january-2012/,
    this claim of enormous mental decline, besides being obviously idiotic, has the convenient consequence that the rebellious wisdom of experienced philosophers will be ignored, as it will, no doubt, be presented as a consequence of lack of reasoning capability…
    PA

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    1. Patrice, reminds me of a lovely expression I first hear many years ago when I lived in the small (pop. 300) village of Harberton, about 3 miles from Totnes in South Devon, roughly mid-way between Exeter and Plymouth.

      In the local pub, the Church House Inn, there was a regular old boy who spoke with such a strong Devonian accent that many, including me, had great difficulty in understanding him. He had this favourite expression that often would be directed to no-one in particular, “All the world’s a little queer, except thee and me, …. and I have my doubts about thee!”

      Philosophy at its best! P.

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  4. Not just a little queer new fangled philosophy has to be, or it has nothing to show worth its name. Reinforcing common wisdom is not a worthy focus of philosophical meditation…

    I did read the study slowly (thanks for providing links), and I started to smirk and reach for my incomprehensible accent, as soon as they insisted that one had to be careful to separate different age “cohorts”. That means, to my mind, that there was a strong cultural bias in the study. It’s also pretty clear why, because if one added up all the results, one reaches such dramatic conclusions, all senior people would be senile. As an anti-ageist I stand against that study as i would against a racist study, on a priori grounds…

    In any case, how could one seriously say that there is a minus 35% difference of reasoning ability (whatever that is) between a 40 and 70 year old?

    http://patriceayme.wordpress.com

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