Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board publishes report on Equine Injury in Irish Racing Risk Reduction Programme

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The Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board (IHRB) has today published a report on its Equine Injury in Irish Racing Reduction (EIIRRR) Programme. This report reaffirms the IHRB’s relentless focus on the safety and welfare of our equine and human participants and can be read in full here

Key findings of this report include:

The purpose of the EIIRRR programme is to improve, where possible, the safety of horses and riders racing in Ireland by reducing injury risk. It achieves this through analysis of Irish horseracing equine fatality data, evaluation of worldwide evidence of injury risk mitigation strategies, and intervention where possible using the knowledge gained from both.

Research undertaken as part of this project identified five categories of horse at increased risk of fatal injury, as follows, which are now routinely examined pre-race:

Dr Lynn Hillyer, IHRB Chief Veterinary Officer said: “The IHRB is committed to a relentless focus on the safety of our participants - human and equine - and we consider this to be a core pillar of our work as a regulator. We’re encouraged by the findings of this report and look forward to further improvements in this area as more of our EIIRRR measures and initiatives come into effect.

“I’d like to thank all those whose expertise has helped us prepare this report and deliver these results. This research was made possible by veterinary and horseracing experts from across our industry, including the EIIRRR Project Board, IHRB and HRI management, and our IHRB officials on the ground on a daily basis.”