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Zoe and Lazar (PMU Babies) (Make
sure you read below about what Premarin is and how bad it is for horses and for the woman who take it)
Now, after finding their way to The Gentle Barn, they will spend the rest of their lives in peace. Zoe and Lazar both have learned to enjoy carrots and come running when they are called. About the Premarin (PMU) Industry “PREgnant MARe UrINe” What is Premarin?Menopause affects every woman, and doctors have treated the
symptoms of menopause for nearly 60 years with a drug called Premarin, which has become the third most prescribed drug in
the world (just behind Tylenol), bringing its single maker over one billion dollars per year.However, the production of this drug has cost the lives of over a million horses. Several medically sound alternatives now exist which completely avoid this slaughter
and cruelty and are safer for the women who take them. The cruel manner in which Premarin is produced is outdated and is no
longer necessary. With numerous medically recognized alternative choices for effectively treating menopausal symptoms, including
synthetic estrogens, women now have the opportunity to end a fifty-eight year catastrophe for horses. Cenestin
approved by the FDA in 1999, it has been dubbed "synthetic Premarin". Because of this latest development, no horses
should ever be used to produce estrogen replacement drugs again. What You Don’t KnowSince 1942, a drug called Premarin (pregnant mares' urine)
has been prescribed by doctors to treat the symptoms of menopause in women. Premarin (conjugated estrogens) is extracted from
the urine of pregnant mares (female horses). Because so much of this drug is prescribed,
its production requires the operation of around 700 "farms", in which around 80,000 horses live their entire lives
penned in tiny stalls, unable to turn around or meaningfully lie down, deprived of water, repeatedly impregnated, and continuously
connected to plumbing collecting their urine. When they can no longer produce adequately,
most are immediately slaughtered. Most of their offspring are either put in stalls or slaughtered. Over fifty-eight years of Premarin production, well over a
million horses or perhaps millions of horses, have lived in cruelty and have then been slaughtered. Only in the last twenty
years has this dreadful secret become known at all. Premarin is central to what is
called "hormone replacement therapy" ("HRT"), although it replaces only estrogen, not progesterone or
the other naturally occurring hormones whose levels drop after menopause. This makes any estrogen medically controversial.
Premarin is also controversial because the health risks to women of absorbing a substance
made from equine waste may not be fully known. Further, Premarin is also said, even by its maker, to contain various unknown and unidentified
substances. All of these issues have been buried by Premarin's maker, Wyeth-Ayerst,
a division of American Home Products, headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who have spent tremendous time and money
to sell the notion that only Premarin can treat the symptoms of menopause. The practical monopoly Wyeth-Ayerst has achieved
by avoiding these controversies and, at least so far, burying alternative medications brings Wyeth-Ayerst over $1 billion
in revenues each year from sales of Premarin and other drugs (including Prempro, Premphase, and Prempac) made from pregnant
mares' urine ("PMU"). As a whole new generation of women enters menopause, it is
vital that they be allowed to make informed decisions about the drugs they should or should not take. This requires knowing
what different drugs are available and, most specifically, how Premarin is produced. Read more...
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