Despite being a $15 to $20 billion industry, the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) devotes only two full-time employees to pet food issues, according to a recent report.
“The recent pet food safety crisis has strained this overtaxed system. The CVM received more than 18,000 telephone calls concerning melamine pet food contamination,” the authors of the report wrote.
The report found that the agency is equally challenged by “an explosion of new pet-animal drugs that are essentially a microcosm of the human drugs.”
The pet industry, however, was only a minor concern in the report. Overall, it found that a decrease in funding during the past 35 years caused a 78 percent reduction in food inspections despite an increase in imports. In addition, the FDA estimates it inspects food manufacturers, at most, once every 10 years. Retail food establishments and food-producing farms are never inspected. Scientific and technological knowledge and resources also lagged behind at the agency, the report found.
“Without a substantial increase in resources, the Agency is powerless to improve its performance, will fall further behind and will be unable to meet either the mandates of Congress or the expectations of the American public,” the report said.
The report was prepared for the FDA by a subcommittee of its science board.
-Rose Gordon, Associate News Editor for CatChannel.com