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#9
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[quote]I still don't see why they need names. QUOTE] They do need an identifier for each horse. If they used lip tattoos - the vets don't have those numbers for their patients handy - everything is done by registered name. That would have to be new information the vets start collecting just for the study (ain't gonna happen). At the end of the day when the vet fills out the injury forms, they won't get submitted due to being incomplete. It's also rather easy to misread or transpose a number with a lip number (faded in slightly older horse, etc). Assigning a study accession number wouldn't work very readily, either. First time a horse is submitted, it would be assigned a number, and that number would have to be then known (and used) for the lifetime of the horse by trainers and vets. That won't happen. The TB industry uses horses' registered name for ID - vet's lists, lasix, entries, etc. It's just more of the same. Compare name to color to age to sex, etc. to make sure you have the right horse. Using the registered name the trainers and vets have ready access to and use all the time. So submitting information for the study is easy, and doesn't require collecting new or additional information. Quote:
Of course all the things you list in detail will be tracked. Have you looked at the reporting form? (look back in Bloodhorse last year, they had a copy attached to the announcement article about the study) Quote:
The above is one of the big reasons this study is being funded. Quote:
Simple example: fifty horses with a certain type of non-career ending injury at Track A. They disperse at end of meet to Tracks B, C, D. The horses that go to Track B and C, only one-quarter are reinjured, and not career-ending. The horses that went to D are showing up reinjured, and half are career-ending. What's happening at Track D, and how can that be changed? What if Track D is synthetic, and Tracks B and C are dirt? Quote:
The point of a scientific study is to control the highest number of variables possible, collect the most accurate data possible, not be purposefully sloppy or dismissive on collecting datapoints. One cannot predict beforehand which datapoints will turn out to be of most significance. Not having identifiers on the horses will eliminate a multitude of ways to examine the data. It will eliminate all "career injury accumulation" information, for example, and all "career ending" injuries as they relate to training, history of previous injury, etc. I understand the trainers are jumpy about people not in the barn, not the barn's vet, outsiders, having access to privileged information. However, look at the rationality of that fear - will somebody sneak into Dr. Scollay's office, steal forms or hack into her computer, and find out information about particular horses by name? Frankly, I see no greater risk of that, than there is now of somebody getting that same information from a barn's veterinarians or the vet assistants.
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |