HISA Teams With Amazon, Using AI To Reduce Equine Injuries

HISA is collaborating with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to apply data analytics, machine learning and artificial intelligence with the goal of enhancing equine safety by analyzing the factors contributing to injuries, the organization said in a release Wednesday morning.

Representatives of HISA and AWS–along with a group of Thoroughbred trainers, veterinarians and industry technologists–met at AWS offices in Nashville last month for an Equine Health Innovation Workshop. The meeting focused on using data and technology to determine which interventions, such as specific changes to HISA's rules or the introduction of new technologies, could have further material impact on equine safety.

“The insights gleaned from big data and machine learning have revolutionized industries around the world. Thanks to HISA's uniform reporting requirements, we are now able to apply these powerful tools to help solve the sport's most pressing equine welfare issues,” said HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus. “We're excited to collaborate with the best data experts in the world, including AWS, to develop concrete solutions to address the root causes of equine injuries.”

In addition to inputs such as sensor data from wearable devices, racing and training performance data, racetrack surface data, weather information and veterinary records, HISA and AWS are also exploring potential data inputs from other sources to measure horses' movements with a level of granularity never measured before.

The goal of this work is to create a comprehensive analytics and insights platform that would use HISA's expansive data to test experts' hypotheses about the root causes of equine injuries and provide horses' care teams with the tools needed to potentially predict and prevent injuries before they occur. First steps of this process–including data standardization and data capture/ingestion–are already underway.

“This collaboration signifies a fusion of technology, invention and the vast experience of dozens of leaders in horse racing who care greatly for these equine athletes,” said AWS Business Innovation Principal Glenn Holland. “We are honored to have HISA leverage the AWS Cloud to accelerate their vision and drive this impactful initiative. This project is part of a new era in horse racing, where innovation delivers long-lasting positive impact to the sport.”

AWS has worked alongside other major sports leagues, such as the NFL, for years to analyze injury data and use that data analysis to drive rules changes and equip coaches and club medical staffs with the tools they need to help players manage risk and prevent injuries.

HISA and AWS representatives, along with other industry technology leaders, are taking the next steps in this project at an AWS-led Solution Workshop on Monday, Oct. 30 in New York. The workshop will dive deep on data and technical requirements as well as end-user needs to continue to drive progress on this ambitious endeavor.

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Members of Jockey Mental Health Committee and Advisory Council Announced

Officials at the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) and the Jockeys' Guild have announced that members of the newly formed Jockey Mental Health Steering Committee and Advisory Council have been appointed. An inaugural meeting of the new groups will take place Tuesday, Oct. 3 at Columbia University in New York City. The Steering Committee, led by Ambassador Earle Mack, was created with a collective goal of driving research, programming, and resources towards jockey mental wellness initiatives.

The steering committee members are as follows: Ambassador Earle Mack; Denali Stud's Craig Bandoroff; former NYRA chairman Anthony Bonomo; retired jockey and broadcaster Donna Brothers; retired jockey Eurico Rosa da Silva; West Point Thoroughbreds's Terry Finley; HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus; Terry Meyocks, President and CEO of the Jockeys' Guild; trainer Graham Motion; Churchill Downs's executive director of racing, Gary Palmisano; and the executive director for the Race Track Chaplaincy of America, Dan Waits.

The Advisory Group, under direction of HISA National Medical Director Dr. Pete Hester, will hold weekly brainstorming sessions with industry and external experts before reporting best practices and initiatives to the Steering Committee for next steps and potential full adoption.

The advisory council are as follows: Dr. Pete Hester; Michael Bingman; Mindy Coleman; Pat Day; Ramon Dominguez; Dr. Prudence Fisher; Jeff Johnston; Ann McGovern; Dr. Yuval Neria; and Anne Poulson.

“The Jockeys' Guild appreciates all of the input and interest by industry participants to address jockeys' mental health and wellness,” said Jockeys' Guild President and CEO Terry Meyocks. “The Guild has long advocated for the industry to recognize the stress and everyday challenges jockeys face.  The Guild looks forward to working with the Steering and Advisory Committees to develop programs which will demonstrate that we as an industry are able to support not only the jockeys but their family members as well and eventually all others in our industry.”

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Federal Bill to Repeal and Replace HISA in Pipeline

A bill that would repeal the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) and replace it with a voluntary interstate compact to govern the nation's Thoroughbred, Standardbred, and Quarter Horse racing is about to be introduced in Congress.

The Republican Louisiana Congressman Clay Higgins on Tuesday announced his intention to file the Racehorse Health and Safety Act (RHSA).

The bill would establish a governing body known as the Racehorse Health and Safety Organization (RHSO), which would oversee breed-specific Scientific Medication Control Committees tasked with drafting and recommending drug rules for each breed.

There would also be racetrack safety oversight based on existing standards as set forth by both the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) and the model rules of the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI).

A draft of the pending bill stated that each individual state that wants to join the compact must enact a state law specifically opting in within two years of the bill's passage into federal law.

Each state would decide whether its own racing commission or RHSO got to enforce the new federal rules, which would supersede existing state statutes.

States wouldn't have to opt into RHSO. But the cost of not doing so would jeopardize their racetracks' ability to simulcast out of state.

The draft bill stated that a “host State that is not a member State of the interstate compact is prohibited from allowing interstate transmission of any electronic signal” for betting purposes, including advance-deposit wagering.

Despite the effort to kill HISA, the RHSA bill would retain some similarities to the existing structure that governs America's Thoroughbred industry.

There would still be “covered” horses, races, and licensed personnel. There would still be assessments for each state to pay its share of the costs of federal regulation, although the costs would always be breed-specific, the draft bill stated.

There would also still be a board appointed to oversee the whole thing. But in RHSO's case, five of the directors would be appointed by the state racing commission of each of the five member states that had the greatest number of racing days during the preceding three-year period, with the other four to be appointed by the commissions of the remaining member states.

The National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and the North American Association of Racetrack Veterinarians are among entities that have endorsed the pending legislation.

The NHBPA is simultaneously spearheading a 2 1/2-year-old lawsuit that is trying to derail HISA based on anti-constitutionality allegations. A lower federal court has already ruled that HISA is constitutional, and the Sept. 26 announcement of the new legislation comes eight days before the NHBPA will argue for an overturning of HISA before the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

Doug Daniels, DVM, the president of the NHBPA, praised the pending legislation in a press release that read, in part, “The RHSA is a law that works from the ground up and brings all horseracing industry entities to the table in a collaborative, consensus-driven approach. It's a sensible piece of legislation that will cost horsemen much less than HISA because it will utilize resources already existing in the states. And it will be constitutional and democratic, allowing everyone in the industry to have a voice in the rulemaking process.”

Congressman Higgins said in a press release that the legislation “brings Constitutional liberties and rights to the forefront, protecting the horse racing industry and the beautiful animals that we love.”

Higgins's biography on his official Congressional web page states that he “is widely regarded as one of the most conservative members of Congress.” He grew up on a Louisiana horse ranch.

A former police officer in the same city as Evangeline Downs racetrack, Higgins resigned amid excessive force allegations before embarking on a political career. Since being elected to Congress in 2016, he has been known as an advocate for small government, and the fourth-term representative's stated chief objectives are border security and the enforcement of immigration laws.

But Higgins has also gained notoriety over the years for his controversial–and at times threatening and mocking–social media postings, some of which have run afoul of Facebook's “Violence and Incitement” policies.

Higgins's press release announcing the RHSA bill was accompanied by a headline that referenced his “Fight” against “Federal Overreach” and “Oppressive Mandates.”

Higgins said in his RHSA release that “Government should be a partner to Americans, not a predator.” Yet Higgins didn't elaborate on any allegedly predatorial aspects related to HISA.

Higgins did choose in his statement to politicize recent horse fatalities by blaming HISA for not being able to pinpoint why they happened.

“After [HISA's] full implementation, Churchill Downs Racetrack, home of the [GI] Kentucky Derby, was forced to shut down after twelve horses died in six weeks,” Higgins said. “Despite spending millions, the HISA Authority has failed to identify the cause of the problem.”

A months-long investigative report that the HISA Authority released Sept. 12 attributed the Churchill deaths from this past spring to no common cause. At the same time, the Authority created a multi-pronged “strategic response plan” that it believes will contribute meaningfully to the reduction of future equine fatalities.

In the wake of the RHSA bill's unveiling, Lisa Lazarus, the HISA Authority's chief executive officer, countered with her own statement in defense of her organization's enabling law that read, in part, “HISA is the law of the land and has made significant progress since its implementation began in July 2022. By bringing together stakeholders across racing, HISA has, for the first time, established national, uniform Racetrack Safety rules and a clear, tough and fair Anti-Doping and Medication Control program….

“The racing industry definitively proved over decades that voluntary compacts and state-by-state patchwork regulation do not work,” Lazarus continued. “At a time when I have called for an 'all-hands-on-deck' approach, it is disappointing to see there are still some who would rather throw up roadblocks than come together for the benefit of racing.”

A key plank in the RHSA legislation is that its overseeing entity must justify its decisions with “scientific evidence.”

The draft bill stated that, “In developing proposed scientific medication control rules with respect to a breed of covered horses, to the extent possible, a scientific medication control committee shall use scientific methods [and] take into account the unique characteristics and needs of such breed and its racing performance model, including the varying number and nature of races each year for the breed.”

In addition to having to pass a state law just to opt in to the RHSO, the draft of the bill explained that another condition of being a member will be for each state to enact a law cracking down on “deceptive” horse sales that involve horses that have been administered certain substances.

The draft bill stated each state shall “have in effect a statute that treats as an unfair or deceptive act or practice the sale of a covered horse [if] the seller knows or has reason to know the horse has been administered a bisphosphonate prior to the horse's fourth birthday or any other substance or method the RHSO determines has a long-term degrading effect on the soundness of the covered horse and fails to disclose to the buyer the administration of the bisphosphonate or other such substance or method.”

In more general terms, covered horses may only participate in covered races “if the horse is free from the active pharmacological effect of medications, other foreign substances, and methods that enhance the natural performance of the covered horse,” the draft bill stated.

Covered horses that are “injured or determined by a veterinarian to be unsound may not train or participate in a covered horserace; and the use of medications, other foreign substances, and treatment methods that mask pain in order to allow an injured or unsound covered horse to train or race in a covered horserace shall be prohibited,” the draft bill stated.

Regarding sanctioning, the RHSO may impose upon certain rulebreakers “lifetime bans from horseracing, disgorgement of purses, monetary fines and penalties, and changes to the order of finish in covered races,” the draft bill stated.

With respect to scientific medication control rule violators who want to appeal penalties, there will be “an opportunity to reduce the applicable administrative sanctions that is comparable to the opportunity provided by the Protocol for Olympic Movement Testing of the United States Medication Agency.”

Funding of the RHSO was addressed in the draft bill, but only in very general terms.

“The RHSO, acting through the Board, shall assess an initial fee from each State racing commission of a member State in an amount determined by the Board to be sufficient to cover the startup costs of the racing commission for the first full year that begins after the effective date…” the draft bill stated.

States will get billed–similar to how they are now assessed by HISA–and it will then be up to each state racing commission to determine how it will come up with the money to pay its share.

The draft bill stated this money can come “from a variety of sources, including foal registration fees, sales contributions, starter fees, track fees, and other fees on covered persons.”

The draft bill even included a provision of what is to happen if the RHSO runs in the red.

“The RHSO may incur debt to carry out the duties of the RHSO but may not accept loans from any covered person or equine industry representative,” the draft bill stated.

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Open Letter To The Industry: Lisa Lazarus

Dear Thoroughbred racing participants,

HISA's most important mission is to protect the health and wellbeing of the horses participating in Thoroughbred racing. Over the past few months, the challenges of that mission–and the critical importance of it–have never been more apparent.

The events at Churchill Downs, Laurel Park and Saratoga Race Course this spring and summer were a sobering reminder that we must further prioritize creating a culture of safety and an ecosystem of care that takes into account all factors contributing to equine fatalities. And it is the responsibility of all racing participants to do their part.

HISA's investigation into the circumstances surrounding equine fatalities at Churchill Downs earlier this year did not identify any singular explanation for the fatalities, despite extensive investigation and analysis of the track surface, veterinary records, necropsies and whether any rule violations occurred. The absence of a singular explanation underscores the urgent need for further action and analysis to mitigate risk stemming from several factors potentially contributing to equine fatalities. HISA's full report on the findings was released publicly last week and can be found here.

HISA's strategic recommendations and next steps moving forward–also announced last week–include the following:

  • A sophisticated data analysis effort to explore critical questions facing the sport to yield new, actionable insights, made possible by uniform reporting requirements under HISA.
  • The creation of a committee to work toward the study and ultimate introduction of more synthetic surface options in Thoroughbred racing.
  • Improved veterinary screening and diagnostic procedures, including:

–Making PET scans more accessible to racetracks across the country;

–Conducting a research study to examine the causes of exercise-associated sudden deaths;

–Further use of wearable technology as an injury detection tool;

–An examination of whether there are any other equine fitness tools worthy of investment and deployment

HISA has also formed a new Track Surface Advisory Group comprised of seasoned track superintendents to assist in surface analysis and make recommendations on an ongoing basis.

This moment is and should be a turning point for our sport. It is essential that all corners of the racing world come together to do their part to reduce equine fatalities and protect these magnificent athletes.

HISA is grateful for the work of everyone involved in the sport whose job it is to protect the health and wellbeing of Thoroughbreds. We know that you share in our cause and that together, we can make racing the safest, and best, version of itself.

Yours in racing, Lisa Lazarus

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