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Premarin:
Seeing Fear in the Eyes of the Foals
Marc
Paulhus
Equine Director, Humane
Society of the United States
Watching
foals being auctioned for slaughter confirms the ugly reality
of PMU farms.
Horses
have the largest eyes of any land animal. Those who buy
and train horses often look for what they call a “kind
eye” when making their choices, but it is, more accurately,
an expression of interest and alertness, without fear.
I,
on the other hand, am troubled by recent memories of
young horses who were very, very afraid. Their eyes were
opened so wide that the white rim normally hidden from
view was visible. The youngsters whinnied and huddled together,
trembling, crammed onto the sale floor at a crowded and
noisy livestock auction in Canada. The bidding had begun....
I
had gone to Canada hoping to resolve disparities among
the statements of a giant pharmaceutical company, a
trade association, and their opponents. At issue is the
treatment of more than 50,000 pregnant mares used in the
production of the estrogen-replacement drug, Premarin®, and those
mares’ foals.
For
years there have been allegations that the mares are abused
during the six-month season every year that their estrogen-rich
urine is collected. Harnessed in narrow stalls and unable
to turn around, pregnant mares have been found deprived
of exercise, adequate water, and veterinary care while
tethered by chains so short they could not even lie down
comfortably. The World Society for the Protection of Animals,
among others, documented such serious problems in 1995
during tours of pregnant mare urine (PMU) production farms
(see the Winter 1996 HSUS News). Since then the manufacturer
of Premarin, Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, has claimed that
many problems have been corrected and that company inspections
of PMU farms have increased. But Wyeth-Ayerst has refused
to allow The HSUS access to PMU farms to independently
verify conditions.
The
fate of the foals also has been hotly contested. Wyeth-Ayerst
and PMU farmers have denied allegations by animal-protection
advocates that most of the foals go to slaughter. That
denial lacks credibility.
More
than half of all PMU farms — 282
of approximately 500 — are located in the province
of Manitoba. The 1994 Manitoba Agriculture Yearbook, a
provincial government document, reported that the PMU industry
in Manitoba “produced close to 27,000 foals, some
of which were used as replacement stock, some sold as pleasure
horses, and the remainder, approximately 17,800 animals,
sold to feedlots.” (Horses and foals that are not
sent directly to slaughter are often “fattened” in
feedlots for several months before being killed.) Thus
the 1994 Yearbook data show that two-thirds of all PMU
foals born in the province that year were slaughtered — nearly
identical to the figure the government reported for 1993.
Many
PMU foals could not have been offered for sale — for slaughter or
for any other purpose. Many were dead before the farm sales and auctions ever
occurred. A research study published by the Canadian Veterinary Journal reported
that 22 percent of foals born on PMU farms in western Manitoba between April
18 and May 31, 1994, had died. Extrapolating these findings to the entire province,
almost 6,000 PMU foals may have died within the first six weeks of life alone.
The study cited comparable figures for foal mortality on farms managed to produce
riding horses as ranging from 3 percent to 12 percent, asserting that such
foals “were assigned a higher value, so that more resources were spent
on individual foals.” Sadly, PMU foals, only a by-product of the drug
industry, are usually worth far less than is the urine their mothers produce.
The
Journal article listed the principal causes of death for PMU foals
as starvation and/or exposure. Under conditions said to
be typical of the PMU industry, mares were removed from
the collection barns in early April after several months
of near total immobility. They were then turned out in fenced paddocks
to deliver their foals, often in subzero temperatures,
without benefit of any shelter. Most of the foals that
died were dead within days. Such deaths are totally inexcusable
and entirely preventable.
If
the 1994 Yearbook statistics are properly adjusted to exclude
foals who had already died on the farm from the total made
available for sale, then the proportion of all surviving
PMU foals sent to feedlots and slaughterhouses would increase
from 66 percent to 81 percent.
The
North American Equine Ranching Information Council (NAERIC), a nonprofit
group organized to represent PMU farmers, provides vastly
different estimates. According to information posted on
NAERIC’s World Wide Web site, fewer
than one-third of the foals born on all PMU farms go to the international
meat market. The Web site states that 24 percent are retained as
future PMU replacement stock, 20 percent are sold for recreational
purposes, 15 percent go to ranches and rodeos, and 9 percent
are sold as show horses. NAERIC points to data from its
survey of member PMU farmers throughout Canada and North
Dakota to confirm its assertions. The only similarity between
its claims and the official Manitoba government records
is that both conveniently neglect to mention the thousands
of foals who apparently die on PMU farms before any dispersal sales
can be held.
As
a representative of PMU farmers, NAERIC has a clear interest
in countering criticism of its industry. That interest
aside, some of NAERIC’s statements,
such as the claim that nearly one-quarter of the foals are retained
for replacement stock, are inconsistent. NAERIC maintains that the
average PMU mare is in production for twelve years. If so it should
be necessary to keep less than 10 percent of the female foals as
future replacement mares and probably less than 1 percent as breeding
stallions.
Manitoba’s agriculture officials, on the other
hand, are arguably more objective. (Unfortunately, the agriculture
departments in Alberta and Saskatchewan, where PMU farms also exist,
either don’t
collect or don’t make available comparable data on PMU farms.)
They support their estimates with inspection reports of livestock
auctions, health records, and other forms of public documentation.
The NAERIC survey data used to substantiate its position are not
so credible, since they are generated by NAERIC itself. The HSUS
sent me to Canada in early September [1997], when PMU farmers sell
their surplus foals at public auctions and farm sales, to gather
information independent of either government or trade group sources.
I attended two of the largest auctions, held in Virden and Winnipeg,
Manitoba, where approximately 1,700 foals were offered for sale.
Large crowds attended these sales, but preferential seating in the
front row was given to individuals representing certain feedlots
and slaughterhouses.
Often
foals were sold in lots of up to 60, with the auctioneers
announcing the number of foals in the group and the average
weight of the animals before the bidding began. As a result
people who might have been willing to provide a home for a
single foal or two were locked out of the general bidding.
The auctioneers often referred to the foals as “meat horses,” making
it all too clear what their eventual fate would be. Foals were quarter
horses, Belgians, Percherons, Appaloosas, Thoroughbreds, paints,
standardbreds, and crossbreeds of all kinds. They were also very
young, averaging only three to five months of age, though some appeared
to be even younger. (Although equine veterinarians generally agree
that the best time to wean a foal is at about six months of age,
PMU foals are weaned much younger. Because they have an eleven-month
gestation, PMU mares must be reimpregnated eight to ten days after
foaling and returned to the urine collection barns.)
From
my own observations and the consensus of several others
attending the sales, at least 70 percent of the foals at
these auctions were purchased for slaughter. Because an
overpopulation of horses exists in North America, thousands
of surplus foals cannot find ready buyers. In this sparsely
populated part of Canada, where the winters are harsh and
the summers are short, relatively few people keep horses
strictly for recreational riding. Most PMU foals are unregistered,
even if purebred, and they are not as desirable or valuable
as are “papered” horses in the
eyes of many horse buyers. It is no surprise then that, without a
local demand, many of the foals are disposed of as surplus horses
usually are — by being
sold to slaughter buyers.
We
can take some comfort in knowing that improvements have
been made by the PMU industry, however difficult it may
be to evaluate them. Tom Hughes of the Canadian Farm Animal
Care Trust has followed the industry for more than thirty
years, and he remembers a time when conditions for PMU
horses were much worse. Eventually, in 1990, government
officials, veterinarians, and industry representatives
drafted a voluntary code of practice that set minimum standards
that farmers must meet to maintain their contracts with
Wyeth-Ayerst. After the farm inspection tours of 1995,
additional improvements were implemented and the drug company
pledged to undertake more frequent compliance checks. Yet
some serious problems remain — notably the long-term confinement
without adequate exercise of PMU mares and the killing of surplus
foals.
The
HSUS Scientific Advisory Council sent a mailing to nearly
50,000 obstetricians and gynecologists last May that
described the many alternative estrogen-replacement drugs
available that are not derived from horse urine. [See “Facts About
Hormone Replacement Therapy.”] It outlined a number of alternative
approaches to treating menopausal symptoms and estrogen deficiency.
Doctors requested thousands of additional brochures to share with
their patients and colleagues, spreading the word that alternative
therapies to Premarin are available to every woman.
A
few people at the auctions I attended did purchase foals
who would certainly go to new and better homes. Fifty foals
were acquired by two U.S. horse-rescue groups, Ipswich
Equine Rescue in Massachusetts and United Pegasus Foundation
in California. A Canadian group, the Responsible Animal
Care Society, purchased 22 more.
Those
lucky few are now living and thriving in British Columbia,
California, Massachusetts, New York, Tennessee, and elsewhere.
If “only” approximately
17,000 PMU foals are killed annually, that number is still horrifying.
If twice that number are slaughtered, the magnitude of the horror
is increased but it cannot be intensified.
I
wish all women who take Premarin could look into the eyes
of PMU foals and judge for themselves what kindness really
is. Every woman has a choice, and every choice will make
a difference.
For more information on this issue, visit LINKS GALORE,
PICTURE GALLERY, WHAT YOU CAN DO, and BOOKS.

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