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Horses, like people, have health problems sometimes and need medication to recover or help ease the pain as they recover. It's up to the trainer to give the appropriate amount for the horse. In Europe, the horses are not allowed to race with any type of medications in their system, but in the United States there are certain medications allowed. The medications allowed can not be given on the same day as the race though. Depending on the state's discretion, many states require that the medication be given at least forty-eight hours to ninety- six hours before the race. The medications also have a standard limit allowed to be given in each state, so if a horse has more in their system then allowed, the trainer could be given a written warning and a fine at the very least. In 2011, a horseracing act was invoked. It's called the Interstate Horseracing Improvement Act of 2011. Currently, the IHIA stipulates that the Federal Government has the ability to regulate only inter-state wagering. (15 U.S.C. § 3001 (1978)) However, Senator Tom Udall proposed an amendment to add to the IHIA that gave the Federal Government oversight to the entire industry. (Tom LaMarra, Federal Regulation Gets Push with Caveats, BLOOD- HORSE(July 13, 2012), http://www.bloodhorse.com/horse- racing/articles/71210/federalregulation-gets-push-with-caveats . ) The Interstate Horseracing Improvement Act of 2011 calls for a uniform ban on all race-day medications, implements a "three strikes and you are out penalty" for all participants, and "requires drug testing of race horses by independent accredited labs." (Fact vs. Fiction: Ending Race Horse Doping, TOMUDALL.SENATE.GOV (April 5,2012), http://www.tomudall.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=1051 .) The first time offender will receive a 180 day suspension; a $5,000 fine, a second time offender will receive at least a year
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