Abstract

Simple SummaryOntario’s Alcohol and Gaming Commission records equine racing fatalities through its Equine Health Program. This study examines the 695 Thoroughbred occurrences from 2003 to 2015 with the aim of identifying associations. Deaths occurred within 60 days of a horse racing or being entered or qualified to race. Calculated on the most commonly adopted basis, rates for Ontario Thoroughbreds are high—2.94/1000 starts (all fatalities) and 1.96/1000 (breakdowns only), compared with a global industry breakdown range of 0.29–2.36/1000 starts. The study revealed several significant risk factors, including workload, stage of training, age, sex, stage of career, finish position, race field size, and day of week. Among fatalities were groups where combinations of these risk factors were important, such as being a two-year-old male, un-castrated, and in early training. Probability of fatality fell over the study period in response to increasing awareness through existence of the Program and adoption of new regulations, but remains of concern. All identified associations represent aspects of management and industry structure that are amenable to change with a view to reducing fatalities. A link between fatality and cumulative, non-fatal outcomes should also be considered. An overall approach might view associated factors as sources of physical and psychological stress that, acutely and cumulatively, may influence the liability for adverse outcomes in training and racing.Ontario’s Alcohol and Gaming Commission records equine racing fatalities through its Equine Health Program. The present study examined all Thoroughbred fatalities from 2003 to 2015, inclusive, to identify associations. Official records and details of fatalities were combined in multivariable logistic regression modelling of 236,386 race work-events (433 fatalities), and 459,013 workout work-events (252 fatalities). Fatality rates were 2.94/1000 race starts (all fatalities) and 1.96/1000 (breakdowns only) with an overall rate of 2.61% or 26.1 fatalities/1000 horses. Comparison with published reports reveals rates to be high. Musculoskeletal injury was the predominant complaint and there was a high incidence of horses dying suddenly. Liability was high for young horses early in the season with a differential according to sex and whether a male horse was gelded. Horses undertaking repeated workouts had a higher liability and liability was higher in workouts for horses switching from dirt/synthetic to turf racing and for young horses in sprints. Race distance was not significant but high fatality rates in some large field, distance races combined with effects of age and workload identified groups at particular risk. As field size increased, fatality liability increased for early-finishing horses. Findings suggest jockey strategy could be an important factor influencing fatalities. Probability of fatality declined over the study period. Findings indicate that rapid accumulation of workload in animals early in their preparation is likely to be damaging. Fatality fell toward the end of a season and for horses with a long career history of successful performance; however, horses not exhibiting this robustness and staying power represent the population of greatest concern. Associations may be characterised as representing sources of stress, current or cumulative, and identifying at-risk animals on this basis may be as productive as targeting specific, discrete mechanisms suspected to contribute to individual fatalities.

Highlights

  • Injuries and fatalities in horse racing are issues for the general public [1,2,3] as well as for the industry [4], and have the potential to damage the industry’s social license to operate because of the associated welfare concerns

  • Since turf racing tends to involve a higher quality of horse on Ontario tracks, these findings suggest qualifying for a change in race surface to turf may be accompanied by unusual risk for older horses

  • This study focuses on general fatality within a 60-day window, though musculoskeletal injuries (MSI) predominated in presenting problems with the interval between work and death being short and with a high exercise association and MSI-related fatality rate [27]

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Summary

Introduction

Injuries and fatalities in horse racing are issues for the general public [1,2,3] as well as for the industry [4], and have the potential to damage the industry’s social license to operate because of the associated welfare concerns These issues have led to extensive research to identify underlying causes [5,6,7,8]. Associations are examined between horse, work, and racing environment factors and these adverse outcomes to gain insights into causation and identify preventive strategies This approach has been useful for MSI, the greatest source of loss [7,9,10,11,12,13], and many risk factors have been identified. It has led to recognition of the importance of bone strength and density and the manner in which this accrues, the importance of micro fractures, accumulated strain and the time required for adequate healing or adaptation to take place, and the overall impact of cumulative wear and tear [13,14,15,16,17]

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