HILL'S PET NUTRITION

Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc. logo

'Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc' is a subsidiary of Colgate-Palmolive Company. They are a large scale provider of dog and cat foods.

Contents
History
Prescription Diet
Hill's prescription diet cat products
Involvement in 2007 Pet Food Recalls
External links
References

History


Hill's Pet Nutrition was a division of Hill Packing company, founded in 1907 by Burton Hill in Topeka, Kansas. Hill Packing originally sold Hill's dog food and was the second dog food manufacturer to can dog food. Hill Packaging company had two slaughtering buildings. One was a government-inspected plant that processed horse meat for human consumption. The second plant processed mules, donkeys, and diseased horses as well as waste from the other plant to make dog food.
In the mid-1940s a New Jersey veterinarian Mark Morris Sr. of Raritan Animal Hospital approached Hill Packing company with a dog food diet for dogs with kidney problems. It was called K/D (Kidney Diet). The dog food market was very competitive, and most of the profits were being made in the horse meat division. Mr. Davis, then Vice President of Hill packing company, thought that this would be a profitable product, and a business relationship was started with Mark Morris Sr. Originally, he was paid a royalty of approximately five cents per pound of pet food. The K/D diet was the start of the Prescription Diet brand. In 1968 the Science Diet brand of over the counter pet foods was introduced.
Even though they were the first company to provide specialized nutrition choices for dogs and cats, the company never had much more than a niche market until 1976 when Colgate-Palmolive acquired their parent company, Riviana Foods, which had purchased Hill Packing company a few years earlier from the Hill Family. At first, Colgate considered selling Hill's because it did not fit in with the company's core products, but the chairman-to-be of the company, Reuben Mark, put forth an ambitious plan to turn Hill's into a global pet food supplier and the company was spared.
Today, Hill's is the largest employer of veterinarians outside of academia. They sponsor many pet nutrition related veterinary school programs and hold seminars and training sessions on the subject of pet nutrition for practicing veterinarians. Their Prescription Diet line of foods is available from veterinarians throughout much of the world, and the Science Diet line of cat and dog foods are available in pet specialty stores and veterinary clinics.

Prescription Diet


Hill's has a large line of prescription foods for cats and dogs with specific diseases.
Prescription diet dry and canned food is only available through a vet and carries a rather steep price. Prescription diet food replaces all other food until the disease is cleared or for the rest of the pet's life if it is chronic.
Hill's prescription diet cat products

a/d - Accident recovery, weight gain
c/d - Feline lower urinary tract disease
d/d - Skin reactions to food
g/d - Heart disease
i/d - Gastrointestinal diseases
k/d - Kidney failure
l/d - Liver disease
m/d - Weight loss for diabetics
r/d - Obesity or hyperlipidemia
s/d - Struvite crystals
t/d - Dental disease
w/d - Weight control for specific problems
x/d - Oxalate crystals
z/d - Food allergy

Involvement in 2007 Pet Food Recalls


Main articles: 2007 pet food recalls

On March 30, 2007, Hill's Pet Nutrition announced that it was recalling a specialized dry cat food, "Prescription Diet m/d", because it contained the same wheat gluten implicated in the recalls of pet food manufactured by Menu Foods [1] The recalled food is sold through veterinarians for cats with obesity or diabetes.

External links



Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc. Home Page

References



★ Parker-Pope, Tara, (November 3, 1997). "Why Vets Recommend 'Designer' Chow". ''The Wall Street Journal''.

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