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Pet Food Regulations

What Happens in a FDA Inspection Following Reports of Sick Pets?

Not much.

We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with FDA for the consumer complaints (adverse event reports) the agency received linked to pet foods. It took the FDA four years to provide the information (federal law requires government agencies to provide FOIA requested documents within 20 working days).

From the FDA provided FOIA request, Blue Buffalo Pet Food was reported to the FDA 84 times within nine months (6/1/20 – 3/3/21); consumers reporting sick, hospitalized, and pet deaths linked to Blue Buffalo. Click Here to view those adverse event reports.

Based on these adverse event reports, we filed another FOIA request with FDA to learn if the agency investigated these 84 adverse event reports received – if FDA tested any Blue Buffalo pet foods and if FDA inspected the Blue Buffalo manufacturing facility. We waited 9 months for the FDA to provide this requested information.

The recently provided FOIA request did not provide any lab results of testing of Blue Buffalo pet foods. The FDA did NOT test any Blue Buffalo pet foods even though the agency received 84 reports of sick, hospitalized, and pet death reports within 9 months – all reported as linked to Blue Buffalo pet foods.

The FDA did perform an inspection of the Blue Buffalo pet food manufacturing facility, however the inspection was classified as a standard inspection; “CGMP/PC Surveillance inspection“. The FDA website tells us this classification of inspection is: “Surveillance inspections are conducted to monitor the manufacturing process and the quality of FDA regulated products on the market. The agency uses the inspection to evaluate whether a manufacturer is complying with quality manufacturing practices.”

IF the agency was inspecting a pet food plant based on reports of sick, hospitalized, and dead pets – the inspection would be classified as a “for-cause inspection“. “For-cause inspections are triggered when the agency has reason to believe that a facility has quality problems, to follow up on complaints or to evaluate corrections that have been made to address previous violations.”

Thus, this Blue Buffalo inspection was not performed due to the 84 consumer complaints reporting sick, hospitalized and pet deaths over the previous nine months. This inspection was a standard pet food inspection, similar to what would be performed at any pet food manufacturer. An inspection to ‘evaluate’ Blue Buffalo, to assure the manufacturer ‘is complying with quality manufacturing practices.’

So…what is involved in a FDA inspection to evaluate a pet food manufacturer, to determine if the manufacturer is complying with required manufacturing practices? Not much.

First, the FDA did not perform the inspection. Instead, they sent the Missouri Department of Agriculture to perform the inspection on behalf of FDA.

The inspection took place over three days. Two of the three day inspection were performed “virtually“. The virtual inspection “included a complete review of the food safety plan, training records, hazard analysis“.

Note the inspection report stated regulatory ‘reviewed’ Blue Buffalo’s food safety plan, reviewed training records, and reviewed the pet food manufacturer’s hazard analysis. Emphasis on ‘reviewed’ – nothing appears to have been validated.

Statements from the inspection report confirm lack of validation; (bold added) “Firm’s personnel appear to be qualified to perform their assigned duties.” There was no evidence the inspection personnel actually spoke with employees to confirm personnel are qualified.

Regarding employee training, the inspection report stated: (bold added) “the facility and individual assigned duties seems to have been implemented“.

Per the inspection report, the virtual portion of the inspection was little more than regulatory asking questions, and accepting the pet food manufacturer’s responses as factual.

Day three of the inspection was at the pet food manufacturing plant, representatives of Missouri Department of Agriculture performed a “walk through, inspection of further records, grounds and close out was conducted.”

This walk through involved (bold added)…

Plant in general was kept clean and in good repair.”

All ingredient and finished product storage is adequately identified.”

Pest service by (redacted) appears to be adequate. Records of visits and treatment by the contractor were available for viewing.

The inspection report does not indicate inspectors actually viewed the pesticide records or performed any testing for pesticide residues within the plant.

Were samples of pet food collected for testing? No.

Were samples of raw ingredients collected for testing? No.

Did the Missouri Department of Agriculture discuss the 84 reports of sick pets FDA received over the previous nine months? Only three of the 84 reports were discussed.

The inspectors discussed only “13 complaints” with Blue Buffalo. Five were from 2016, two from 2017, three from 2019, three from 2020. Blue Buffalo told the inspectors “a thorough investigation would have been completed.”

And that was it. The regulatory authorities accepted as factual that this pet food manufacturer performed a thorough investigation regarding consumer complaints. Regulatory did not ask for any evidence of an investigation, regulatory did not request or view any laboratory testing results of pet foods involved in the consumer complaints.

End of inspection.

Click Here to read the full inspection report.

So many concerns…

This was certainly not an inspection, it was a conversation.

Because pet’s lives are at stake, inspections should always include validation of all claims made by a manufacturer. Validation should include testing of raw ingredients and finished pet food for all types of contaminants including pesticides used at the facility. Validation should include discussions with manufacturing employees in confidential settings (not with management only) to determine if claims of proper training are actually implemented.

If a pet food manufacturer claims “a thorough investigation” was performed as follow up to a consumer complaint received, regulatory should closely examine what that investigation entailed.

Regulatory authorities need to hire skilled private investigators to train their inspectors. Regulatory needs to learn how to properly validate claims made by pet food.

Question and answer inspections are not inspections, they are conversations.

Pet owners deserve a lot better than what we are getting from our regulatory authorities.

Wishing you and your pet(s) the best,

Susan Thixton
Pet Food Safety Advocate
TruthaboutPetFood.com
Association for Truth in Pet Food


Become a member of our pet food consumer Association. Association for Truth in Pet Food is a a stakeholder organization representing the voice of pet food consumers at AAFCO and with FDA. Your membership helps representatives attend meetings and voice consumer concerns with regulatory authorities. Click Here to learn more.

What’s in Your Pet’s Food?
Is your dog or cat eating risk ingredients?  Chinese imports? Petsumer Report tells the ‘rest of the story’ on over 5,000 cat foods, dog foods, and pet treats. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Click Here to preview Petsumer Report. www.PetsumerReport.com

Find Healthy Pet Foods in Your Area Click Here


The 2024 List
Susan’s List of trusted pet foods. Click Here to learn more.


The 2023 Treat List
Susan’s List of trusted pet treat manufacturers. Click Here to learn more.

4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. T Allen

    July 25, 2024 at 11:05 am

    It’s time to accept the fact that the FDA is NOT going to do anything about complaints with pet food. They have enough on their plates trying to keep up with human food safety issues and drugs. The only way this will improve is if animal products get their own department within the Gov and that seems unlikely as long as Big Pet Food keeps making a lot of money. (Sort of like Big Pharma). The best we can do is keep publicizing what’s in pet food, how it is killing our pets, and how to feed “real” food if you want your pet to live a normal lifespan. Word is getting out and once BPF starts losing money they’ll start being more careful. Until then, unless we can fund our own feed testing and certification program, it’s buy human grade or make your own. 🙁

  2. Amy

    July 25, 2024 at 12:19 pm

    And yet a raw pet food company gets a complaint and the FDA is on the company’s back like flies on poop.

  3. Barbara Fellnermayr

    July 25, 2024 at 5:31 pm

    Ever wonder why there are flies on raw poop but not kibble poop?

    Cuz raw food uses real meat. Even flies know the difference!

    I’ve been holding this gem back for 15 years! Looking for the right audience to use it on!

    Have a fantastic day!

  4. Peter Hood

    July 26, 2024 at 7:56 am

    An example of the FDA being in “regulatory capture” by the industry it is charged to monitor.

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Human Grade & Feed Grade
Do you know what the differences are between Feed Grade and Human Grade pet food? Click Here.

 

The Regulations
Pet Food is regulated by federal and state authorities. Unfortunately, authorities ignore many safety laws. Click Here to learn more about the failures of the U.S. pet food regulatory system.

 

The Many Styles of Pet Food
An overview of the categories, styles, legal requirements and recall data of commercial pet food in the U.S. Click Here.

 

The Ingredients
Did you know that all pet food ingredients have a separate definition than the same ingredient in human food? Click Here.

Click Here for definitions of animal protein ingredients.

Click Here to calculate carbohydrate percentage in your pet’s food.

 

Sick Pet Caused by a Pet Food?

If your pet has become sick or has died you believe is linked to a pet food, it is important to report the issue to FDA and your State Department of Agriculture.

Save all pet food – do not return it for a refund.

If your pet required veterinary care, ask your veterinarian to report to FDA.

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