The Issues
Current Campaigns
AVMA Reform Campaign
The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) has traditionally endorsed many cruel farming systems, including veal and gestation crates as well as battery cages. In fact, at the most recent AVMA meeting in 2007, the group once again failed to take a position against the cruel forced feeding of ducks and geese which is used to produce foie gras.
Do No Harm: Although the Veterinarian's Oath clearly states that the veterinary medicine profession should aid "the relief of animal suffering," the AVMA unfortunately remains too close to agribusiness, and it has failed objectively to promote animal welfare.
In 2004, Bonnie Beaver, then AVMA President, acknowledged,
"It is important for each of us to recognize that we may at times become too close to the industries we serve, losing our objectivity about what is the best welfare and adopting instead that suggested by industry"
While the AVMA brought up several issues for debate over the past few years, (click here for more info) unfortunately, they have repeatedly failed to take a strong position against the cruelest industry practices.
However, thanks to growing concern and opinions by individual veterinarians, the issues have at least come to the table for discussion and this provides us with a venue to make changes. Polls show that individual veterinarians recognize the inherent cruelty in many industry accepted practices and are willing to convey their position to their trade group (the AVMA)
What You Can Do
- Ask your veterinarian to sign the petition which asks the AVMA to resolve to give higher priority to the care and welfare of animals than industry economics. Please return the signed petition to Farm Sanctuary.
- Please write to the current AVMA President, and urge the AVMA to place a higher
priority on animal welfare than on agribusiness profits. Specifically include examples of foie gras, gestation and veal crates as well as battery cages.
Dr. Roger Mahr, President
American Veterinary Medical Association
1931 N. Meacham Road, Suite 100
Schaumburg, IL 60173
Fax: 847.925.1329
E-mail: avmainfo@avma.org
Please
also ask your local veterinarians to write to the above AVMA representatives,
urging them to place a higher priority on animal welfare when required
to choose between animal welfare and economic considerations. Click
here to print a letter for your veterinarian to sign and mail.
- Order
AVMA Reform Campaign brochures to give to your local veterinarians and
to spread the word about this Farm Sanctuary campaign. To order these
free brochures, simply email campaign@farmsanctuary.org,
click
here or call (607) 583-2225 ext. 251.
- A downloadable version of the AVMA Reform Campaign brochure is available here.
- Click
here for additional background about the AVMA Reform Campaign.
Media
California initiative targets livestock housing California voters will get to decide this November whether certain livestock in their state have a right to more spacious quarters. The ballot initiative, sponsored by a coalition of animal protection groups including the Humane Society of the United States, would require that egg-laying hens, veal calves, and pregnant sows be provided with enough room to lie down, stand, turn around, and fully extend their limbs.
AASV president wants members and students on the farm Dr. Kerry Keffaber's life and livelihood have always included working with pigs.
As president of the American Association of Swine Veterinarians, he hopes to help swine veterinarians and veterinary students spend more time on the farm and be the leaders in caring for pigs. He also wants to strengthen the AASV by building on the foundation of his predecessors.
A
New Problem for Farmers: Few Veterinarians
Rainbow had the bad luck to try to have a baby on a Thursday. Thursday
was her doctors day off, and there was no one else for miles who
could handle a complicated breech birth, not when the mother was a Holstein
cow.
Study:
Animal vet shortage may affect food
Food safety and America's ability to handle outbreaks of catastrophic
animal diseases are being threatened by a projected shortage in food animal
veterinarians, a new study shows.
Factors
In Vet Shortage Began 35 Years Ago
Large animal vet explains that drug companies care more about profit than
animal care and human health:
"....producers aren't trained to discriminate between competing
products and programs to produce healthy animals. Only the attending vet
has the technical knowledge to sort through the sales spin. Some large
companies try to cover their shameful behavior by hiring a veterinarian
willing to prostitute his license visit producers once a year to meet
pharmacy law requirements that he be on the farm if he writes prescriptions
for controlled drugs. All this defeats the purpose of providing professional
care for animals, protection of the food supply and profitable farm management.
Sales pressures have overtaken competency."
For more information,
materials, or if you have any questions, please contact us at campaign@farmsanctuary.org
or at 607-583-2225 ext 251.
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