Why Imported Dogs Could Hurt Your Health
By Dr. Patty Khuly
| November 4, 2011

It’s a disturbing trend that’s
taken off in the past decade: The importation of puppies from overseas, such as
Bulldog breeds and other high-priced pedigrees. People snap them up via “breeders”
and pet shops alike, all while thinking there’s some kind of cachet to buying a
Romanian-born French Bulldog.
Little do they know (or so we can
only hope) that these pups are a) ill-bred relatives to the breed standard
(they look and act less like the breed you think you’re buying) and b) more
likely to suffer genetic diseases than their non-puppy mill, breeder-raised
U.S. counterparts.
At last count — the most recent
year for which statistics were recorded is 2006 — 287,000 such dogs entered the
United States. Considering the seemingly bottomless consumer demand for
purebred and crossbred puppies (aka "designer breeds"), along with
the impact of our increasingly strict breeding laws, experts believe this stat
has likely been dwarfed by 2011’s pup imports.
This may not be such a bad thing,
you may be thinking. Anything’s better than an American puppy mill, right? Well, not necessarily. Puppy mills may
be horrific, with inexcusably deficient conditions for the poor dogs who live
there, but at least they’re regulated by the USDA. In the Ukraine? Not so much.
In fact, it’s a widely held belief
among animal welfare advocates that certain breeds hail from Eastern Europe for
a reason: The region is sophisticated enough to know how to produce notoriously
difficult-to-breed dogs in bulk (like French Bulldogs), but it’s also
unregulated enough that it can do so cheaply. That translates into sight-unseen
puppy mill conditions at best.
In South Florida, where I live, I
guesstimate that more than 50 percent of the French Bulldog and French Bulldog
crosses (yes, the “hybrids” are also popular here) are imported from Romania or
the Ukraine –– where it must cost next to nothing to C-section a bitch, driving
production costs way down relative to U.S.-bred cousins.
It’s no secret that most of the
middlemen in this new import game are puppy millers and less-than-scrupulous
puppy retailers. As conditions for commercial breeders (aka puppy millers) get
tougher in the United States, meeting the demand for purebreds means
outsourcing pup production. So it is that, upon arrival, these pups don’t meet
the loving arms of new owners — and they arrive in crates by the dozens.
This brings me to the transport
issue:
The pups are arriving as 4- to 6-weekers via cargo — I've seen some
terribly young ones in my office as firsthand evidence — hence the sky-high
morbidity and mortality rates in these pups in the days postarrival. And these
are the ones who actually make it. We don’t even have a handle on how many pups
die in transport, because no one is required to keep track of them for
international flights (by contrast, domestic flights must record mortality
stats).
But the welfare issues inherent to
importation are just one side of the coin. The other is the threat of
infectious disease: Based on trends suggesting that the annual number of
unvaccinated puppies being imported into the United States increased
impressively from 2001 to 2006, it becomes glaringly obvious that these dogs
pose a risk for introducing diseases into our country. There are some scary
bugs out there. Bugs that haven't seen our soil for decades, thanks to better
health screenings of more traditional agricultural species, like hogs and
cattle. Unfortunately, the concept of the dog as an agricultural species is
still novel enough that we don't properly track their numbers at our borders.
Indeed, the U.S. government has no
real way of tracking exactly how many dogs are brought into the country, where
they come from, where they're going or whether importers are following
vaccination requirements for underage puppies. And the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection agency has historically been the only one responsible for ensuring
that all imported animals meet federal agency requirements. Yet there’s no
protocol set up for them to do much of anything in these cases.
Scary, right?
The fact that there's a huge
loophole in our war on poor animal welfare is one thing, but the yawning gap in
our nation's biological defenses is quite another.
This is why federal
regulators — who are so new to the problem that they lack the capacity to
handle this burgeoning breed of animal importation — have been asking, “So what
are we supposed to do?”
Predictably, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention has become increasingly alarmed over the
problem. It’s a serious biosecurity threat, after all. It’s probably why the
USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has recently proposed
restricting the importation of dogs into the United States for research, resale
or veterinary treatment to dogs who are older than 6 months, vaccinated and in
good health, with the possibility of a waiver for sick animals who may
legitimately require veterinary care.
This, of course, puts a damper on
purebred pup imports. In the past, I’ve suggested that we consider treating
dogs like any other kind of agricultural import. Cold as that sounds, it
happens to kill two birds with one stone: Not only does it help restrict the
entry of potentially disastrous infectious diseases
into the United States that can harm even humans, but it also addresses serious
animal welfare issues.
And if it means fewer French
Bulldogs on the market? I can live with that. Can you?
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