Thursday, January 4, 2007

Vet Clinic Initiates Law Suit Against State of Florida

Newspapers in South Florida are reporting that Palm Beach Equine Clinic of Wellington, Florida is suing the state of Florida over inaccurate information released during the recent EHV-1 outbreak in Wellington.

Links to stories elsewhere on the Internet:

4 January South Florida Sun-Sentinel report

4 January Palm Beach Post report

Background article for horse owners on Equine Herpes Virus and, in particular, EHV-1, from the American Association of Equine Practitioners

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Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Wellington Update: Facts Unfold as the Smoke Clears

I was lucky to be able to interview Rob Boswell DVM of the Palm Beach Equine Clinic as he was preparing to re-open his vet clinic in Wellington, Florida today. The clinic has been affected by a long voluntary quarantine since December 15.

Now that things have settled down a bit, and no horses have been diagnosed outside the quarantine area (several barns are still under quarantine), there is time to reflect on the outbreak and how it was handled and reported.

When I first heard about the outbreak, I had just stepped off the plane from Palm Beach, where I had coincidentally spent a day in a meeting with Dr. Boswell. He had no idea that a sick horse at his clinic had EHV-1. He wouldn't have been chatting with me if that had been the case.

When I heard the news, I wanted to turn around and be there, on the front lines, so that I could experience the horsiest hamlet in the USA going into prevention mode. I was sure that it would only be one horse, or maybe two, that would be directly affected, but that we could all learn about how a disease is headed off at the pass. Then I thought, "Silly, it will be over before you can get there."

Now it's almost three weeks later, and a lot of people's lives have been turned upside down. They say the outbreak itself is over, but the quarantines go on. And horses are arriving to begin the show season.

As it turned out, I never went back to Wellington, and had to depend on the local press, the state of Florida, the Florida Association of Equine Practitioners, and whoever I could reach by phone to report from the scene. Sandy Johnson was terrific as my remote eyes and ears, describing what she saw and heard and touched and, most of all, felt. She reported that some farms slammed their gates, while some people ventured out and sought advice and expert opinions. But it is obvious that advice was in short supply and the horse world rumor mill was at an all-time high.

At stake were the reputations of horsemen, veterinarians, state officials, federal officials. Also at stake of course, were the lives of horses.

Since I couldn't report in the first person on these stories, I provided links to stories from the local press in South Florida. Many of these articles may have implied that Palm Beach Equine Clinic was the source of the virus, but a more careful reading of each of these articles should disclose that the source was a group of horses that arrived in Wellington from the import station in New York. These horses arrived and were stabled in Wellington for several days. One of these horses went to Palm Beach Equine on December 2, and was discharged on December 3. The horse did not contract the disease at the clinic; it was sick on admission.

According to Dr. Boswell, his clinic was not informed that the horse that had been in the clinic had EHV for quite some time.

At the heart of this problem is that, according to Dr. Boswell, in the state of Florida, EHV is not a "reportable" disease in the eyes of state government health officials. It is "reportable" in New York, New Jersey and some other states. For public health reasons, some diseases are listed so that veterinarians must report any cases to state officials, but this list varies from state to state.

While the people in Wellington, Florida associated with the sick horses may have discovered the cause of the illness, they had no mandate to report it. The "gray areas" surrounding this virus--which horses actually "test" positive for the disease, when and how horses show symptoms, and how the disease is transmitted--make this a tangled web for public health enforcement. Add in the high mobility of race and show and polo horses in the USA, and you have a recipe for outbreaks that can occur anytime the tipping point is reached.

The question harkens back to the old Watergate hearing days: "What did you know and when did you know it?"

In my conversations with horse owners here, I find that few if any really know what EHV is and most believed that their vaccinations would protect their horses. After a brief scare at nearby Fairfield Equine Clinic last week, many started to ask me for resources to more information on the disease. I have not spoken to one owner who understood that a new strain of EHV causes neurological symptoms.

A meeting will be held on Thursday in Wellington so that community members and the media can hear comments on how the outbreak was handled and how the ongoing quarantines and prevention methods might be handled. The comments will be from Doug Byars DVM of Lexington, Kentucky, an expert on infectious diseases and internal medicine. Dr. Byars' opinions are being sought by two leading area veterinarians, John Steele DVM and Ben Schacter DVM, because they respect his opinion and they want to know what is in the best interest of their clients and the horses in their care.

We should all be listening closely to Thursday's meeting. I hope someone tape records it and posts it online as a podcast.

What if it happened in your community, at a show where your horse was stabled, or in your very own barn? Is EHV a reportable disease in your state? Do you know how to find out?

It can happen anywhere. The fact that it has happened recently at a college (Findlay University in Ohio), and at racetracks may make it seem like a remote possibility for your barn.

Ask anyone in Wellington, Florida and they will likely raise an eyebrow and smirk, "Think again."

Background article for horse owners on Equine Herpes Virus and, in particular, EHV-1, from the American Association of Equine Practitioners

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Monday, January 1, 2007

Florida Virus: End of the Year Update on the Ongoing Story

Once again, conflicting news is coming out of South Florida regarding the status of the disease outbreak.

The Florida Association of Equine Practitioners (FAEP) and the State of Florida's Animal Industry web site are reporting that the outbreak is contained, and are sounding optimistic that "the show must go on."

Meanwhile, the Palm Beach Post reported on Friday that another horse tested positive, and a horse has been isolated on the Gulf coast of Florida while veterinarians there await test results to see if the horse, which had been exposed to the Wellington horses, tests positive for EHV-1.

On December 31, the Palm Beach Post reported the death of another horse, the sixth fatality in the Florida outbreak.

Several veterinarians and about 40 trainers, owners, and riders met at the Jockey Club in Wellington, Florida on December 28. Dr. Michael Short from the State of Florida Department of Agriculture was also there to answer questions.

The FAEP, on its web site, reports no known new cases of EHV-1 since the horse at Victory Lane tested positive. The barn where it is stabled is currently under a state quarantine and, according to the most recent report by FAEP, there currently is no known link to this horse and any of the other cases in Wellington.

Guidelines for when horses might begin shipping to Wellington for the upcoming shows and the polo season were discussed at the meeting. Horse show organizers Stadium Jumping and Littlewood Farm, who both cancelled holiday shows, appear comfortable with horses beginning to enter their stabling sometime between January 2nd and January 8th. The conditions or requirements for those horses have not yet been finalized by Stadium Jumping.

Rob Boswell DVM of Palm Beach Equine Clinic discussed the hospital's timeline of the initial case that was admitted to his facility. This detailed report has been linked to this report for those who wish to analyze that aspect of the outbreak.

Meanwhile, on Saturday, the Palm Beach Post attributes news of another case to the State of Florida Department of Agriculture, but there is no mention of this case on the official web site. According to the Post, the first new positive case since December 22, a horse named Lipton, was identified at S&L Farms in Wellington, and there are two new suspect cases at the Palm Beach Equestrian Sports Center.

The Florida Horse Park in Ocala has cancelled an endurance event and polo match this weekend.

Please check back; news may be added throughout the weekend and this conflict in information may clear up. However, official news may be scarce because of the long holiday weekend. I am sorry if this reports sound contradictory, but feel it is best to post news as it is provided to me.

Here are our most recent links:

1 January 2007
University of California at Davis Information Page on EHV (general information on virus, not the current outbreak)

31 December
Palm Beach Post 31 December Report on Sixth Horse to Die

30 December
Palm Beach Post 30 December Report of a New Case

Lee County horse isolated on Gulf coast of Florida, veterinarians await test results

Sun-Sentinel article detailing "wait and see" shippers on December 29

Sun-Sentinel Summary of Cases, Timeline as of 28 December

The State of Florida has added a downloadable PDF file of information on EHV in Spanish; scroll down to the list of documents

The State of Florida has expanded information on its web site about EHV and includes a list of quarantined premises and a timeline of the outbreak

Horse show host Littlewood Farms, which has not been directly affected by any cases, issues strict guidelines and requirements for shippers-in

Florida Horse Park update as posted on USeventing.com

Florida Horse Park home page with video (loads slowly) update from Tom Warriner

Horse Shows in the Sun (HITS) has published health requirements for the upcoming shows in Ocala. HITS showgrounds are not affected by any virus restrictions.

The Palm Beach Post actually had a reporter at the Wellington meeting on the 28th; read this article for quotes from veterinarians and trainers who attended

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Thursday, December 28, 2006

Florida Virus Update: December 27 and 28

Still more bad news drifts northward from Florida, and my heart goes out to all the horsemen, riders, vets, farriers, van drivers, massage therapists--the entire community of horse professionals who are surely doing their best to contain the outbreak, and protect the healthy horses.

The so-called "Victory Lane" horse has been diagnosed as positive for EHV-1; this time at hunter/jumper rider Jackie Leemon's Victory Lane Farm in Wellington, Florida.

This story was born at the same time as this blog, and it has certainly dominated the news. I did not expect to focus so much on one story, but this story has a global impact on the horse show and racing worlds.

It is disturbing to report that this is the "neurological" strain of what we used to call the "rhino" virus. There is currently no vaccine specifically targeting the neurological strain, although the standard EHV vaccine given to our horses can lessen the symptoms, according to the information supplied by the leading authorities in the field.

The incubation period for the virus can be two weeks or up to four weeks, depending on whose advice is heeded. In order for the shows to go on, a period of at least two weeks without any additional cases will be needed. Every time a new case is identified, the counter goes back to Day One.

What's at stake? America's premier East Coast winter series of hunter/jumper/dressage shows, attended by the world's top riders. Horses routinely fly in from the UK, Paris, and beyond. Some have arrived for the season, others are waiting nervously for an "all clear".

In the same area are many of the world's top polo and racehorses, not to mention breeding stock and show horses of virtually all breeds, especially Spanish and Portuguese breeds. But let's not forget that there are many horses kept for recreational riding and companionship throughout South Florida, and that they are just as valuable, and just as much at risk, if they have been out on trails, at arenas, on horse vans, or at vet clinics where infected horse may have shed the virus.

The racing industry has only just recovered from EHV outbreaks that paralyzed racing in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland; an outbreak last year affected Kentucky tracks.

Among today's news stories is the footnote that two of the world's most valuable stakes horses, Breeders Cup champion Invasor and 2005 Belmont Stakes winner Jazil, have been sent back to New York by trainer Kieran McLaughlin, who trains from for Shadwell Stud and Sheikh Hamdan of Dubai. McLaughlin is taking no chances. The pair was stabled at the Palm Meadows training center, which has not been affected by the outbreak. Both horses are expected to ship to Dubai for the World Cup races in March.

Meanwhile, the world's top-rated stakes horse, Discreet Cat, is due to ship home to Dubai this week, but is presumably detained at Payson Park, which is under quarantine following the death of a horse there earlier this week.

On the lighter side, if there is one, the Florida equine virus made the gossip pages of the New York Post this week; the columnist speculated on the inconvenience that heiresses and celebrities have experienced by having to disinfect their shoes before entering barns. My guess is that the heiresses and celebrities are leaving matters to the professionals at a time like this.

The list of articles about the outbreak is growing; a lot of duplication exists on the web so I have provided one link to each major story and tried to identify the source publisher. Sometimes that is not easy.

The following farms, training centers, and equine clinics are currently under quarantine:

* J N Stables – 15680 46th Lane S, Wellington, FL
* S & L Farms - 13155 Southfields Road, Wellington, FL
* Equine Services Ltd. (Isolation Barn only) – 4751 South Road, West Palm Beach, FL
* Palm Beach Equine Sports Complex – 13124 Southfields Road, Wellington, FL
* Palm Beach Equine Clinic (Isolation Barn only) – 13125 Southfields Road, Wellington, FL
* Reid & Associates (Isolation Barn only) – 1630 F Road, Loxahatchee, FL
* Pinehurst Stables – 10095 165th Lane North, Jupiter, FL
* Tuxedo Farms – 7780 NW 137th Avenue, Morriston, FL 32668
* Payson Park – 9700 SW Kanner Highway, Indiantown, FL
* Victory Lane – 14875 Palm Beach Point, Wellington, FL

Articles for December 28:

Sun-Sentinel Report on New Case (12/28 test result) at Victory Lane

Daily Racing Form predicts lift of Payson Park Quarantine, update on Discreet Cat in Quarantine

Palm Beach Post Summary for 28 December

Littlewood Farm Horse Show Cancellation


Nona Garson clinic re-scheduled, notes on health aspects of sport horse auction

http://www.usef.org/content/newsDisplay/viewPR.php?id=1796

University of Florida Menu of Quarantine and Virus Information

Articles for December 27:
State of Florida Virus Update for 27 December

ESPN Report on Invasor and Jazil Evacuation to New York from South Florida

Palm Beach Post Article on Charity 'Equine Triathlon' Cancellation

Articles for December 25:
State of Florida Equine Virus Status Update

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