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Irish Wolfhound History
Pfizer's pet project
Two months ago, drug giant Pfizer (maker of Lipitor and Viagra)
achieved a pair of firsts when the United States FDA approved 2 new products in
their pipeline - a weight-loss medication and a new motion sickness
drug...
For DOGS.
Yep, apparently the human drug market just isn't big enough, so Big
Pharma is setting its sights on the millions of dogs and cats
currently occupying American households.
According to a recent article in the Chicago Tribune, the market for these pet-meds is an impressive one, too:
6 in 10 U.S. households have at least one
resident pet
Americans currently care for 66 million dogs and 78
million cats
The animal health business grew 5% globally last year
to $2.3 billion
Sales of animal health products in America jumped a
full 8% last year (to $6.8 billion) - more than double the rate of
growth for our economy as a whole
Several of Big Pharma's biggest
players are now starting to take this market very seriously as an
outlet for their poisons - er, prescriptions. Pfizer is clearly in
the lead, though. The Tribune piece states that the company that
brought the world Viagra has as many as 600 researchers with a
budget of $270 million earmarked for the development of new animal
drugs...
That's lot of R&D going on. And they think the market for their
newly approved Slentrol drug for canine obesity is huge - more than
17 million American dogs are obese, they claim.
But, like with their masters, the key to losing weight for canines
under the Stars and Stripes is a proper diet, not drugs. And
ironically, that "proper" diet is almost the same for both man and
his best friend: Meats, eggs, raw milk, and occasional fruits and
vegetables (but for Fido and Kitty, these things should remain
uncooked).
And in more drug-related pet news...
Prozac for pups?
Any seasoned or lifelong dog owner has had an experience with a
canine - especially a puppy - that deals poorly with its master
(caretaker for you PC types) leaving the house. But until recently,
everyone just chalked up the barking, whining, pacing, and even
chewing of the furniture to normal doggie behaviour, something to be
lived with and worked through.
However, now that the mainstream has attached the term "separation
anxiety" to this kind of conduct, they've created a DISORDER than
now demands treatment with drugs.
These two magic words ("disorder" and "drugs") have summoned Big
Pharma to the rescue. According to another recent Chicago Tribune
article, Eli Lilly and Co. threw its hat into the pet medication
ring last month with the introduction of its "Reconcile" beef-flavoured
anti-anxiety medication for dogs...
And guess what it's based on: PROZAC.
Yep, that's right, for just a buck or two a day, you can now feed
the same class of medication that has been linked to suicidal
behaviour in teenaged humans to your anxious "adolescent" dogs!
And they call that progress...
Never pushing pup's prescriptions,
William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.
Source: http://www.douglassreport.com/