Pet Medicines: How Safe are They?
A recent article published in the Indianapolis Star has questioned the safety of certain veterinary medications, along with the relationship of veterinarians, pharmaceutical companies, and their ethics
The drug in question is Triflexis, and I have written about the risks associated with it previously.
Here is some of the article:
Harry, Sesame, Ramsey, Kolbe, Rocky and Peaches have something in
common — all of these beloved pets were prescribed a new chewable flea
and heartworm medicine.
And now they're all dead. Their owners wonder if the drug, known as Trifexis, was the cause.
Several
things about the drug make them suspicious. Trifexis, like many new pet
drugs, was not developed specifically as an internal medicine for dogs.
One of its two active ingredients started out as a crop pesticide. Trifexis,
which was developed by Eli Lilly and Co.'s animal drug division,
Elanco, based in Greenfield, has many reported side effects.
An
Indianapolis Star investigation found that one of its two active
ingredients, spinosad, ranks third among all pet drug ingredients for
reports of convulsions, fourth for blindness, sixth for aggression and
paralysis, and seventh for reports of unconsciousness, according to the
latest data available from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The other active ingredient, milbemycin oxime, ranks fifth for convulsions and ninth for deaths.
Dog
owners across the country have reported more than 700 deaths to the FDA
since the drug hit the market in 2011. And the FDA estimates that for
every side effect that's reported nine times as many go unreported.
Trifexis
is far from the only pet drug with hundreds of side effects and deaths
reported. The database includes more than 19,000 dog and cat deaths
reported in connection with a wide variety of pet medicines.
But did Trifexis kill Peaches? Ramsey? Rocky? What is the risk of it — or of other pet medicines — killing your dog or cat?
To
such questions, pet owners simply can't get an independent answer. Not
from veterinarians. Not from the FDA, whose job it is to ensure drug
safety. The companies insist their drugs are safe.
In
a prepared statement, Elanco told The Indianapolis Star: "It's
critically important to understand that reports are not an indication of
cause. For any given (Adverse Drug Event) report, there is no certainty
that the reported drug caused the adverse event." The article then goes on to explore the fuzzy relationship of drugs, veterinarians and money.
Then the 'veterinarians can do NO wrong' site, dvm360 has since responded:
Responses defend veterinarians', industry's motivations and sense of ethical propriety.
By dvm360.com staff
DVM360 MAGAZINE
Veterinarians and veterinary organizations have criticized The Indianapolis Star for its recent report
“Pets At Risk,” a series that criticizes veterinarians’ relationship
with drug manufacturers and implies that financial motivations often
influence practitioners’ decisions more than pets’ and pet owners’ best
interests.
AVMA President Ted Cohn, DVM, wrote a letter to the newspaper's editor to criticize the coverage.
While you tried to paint a picture of veterinarians being beholden
to pharmaceutical companies for monetary gain, you failed to cite even
one specific case of impropriety or lack of professionalism. The same
can be said for your suggestions that the AVMA annual convention
“revealed just one of the many ways corporate money influences pet
health care … threatening the objectivity of those prescribing drugs to
your dog or cat.”
Dr Jones' thoughts
1. Don't give your dog Trifexis or give your cat Comfortis. You can read why in my blog article: http://www.theinternetpetvet.com/is-trifexis-killing-dogs-fda-records-340-dog-deaths-associated-with-trifexis/
2. In every other profession that involves prescribing drugs, 'professionals' admit to having clouded judgements around financial motivation, and prescribing/not prescribing the drug.
Most governing bodies are aware of this, and the public is growing increasingly skeptical.
Except veterinarians..
What do you think?
Many veterinarians are struggling financially, and if anything this MORE than clouds your ethics.
3. Question it all.
Me, the drug companies, and your veterinarian.
Make your own, informed decision.
|