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WHY THIS VET FEEDS PEOPLE FOOD TO HER DOGS
By Paula Terifaj, DVM
Once upon a time, I was your average
dog owner. I felt guilty when I spoiled my dog with "people
food". This concept was reinforced during my veterinary
training, with terms like table food gastroenteritis. Oh, the horror
of clients feeding table scrapes to their dogs! After the reprimand,
instructions to feed only commercial dog foods were made and the
deal was done. Poor Fido was banned from the family dining room
and forced to eat the same boring dog food everyday.
Before the advent of commercial
pet food diets some 50 years ago, family dogs thrived from the benefit
of common sense and our grandmother’s cooking. Before the
craze of pre-packed convenience foods, the relatives of today’s
modern dog enjoyed and prospered eating the same foods we did. That’s
right folks -- those dogs belonging to your grandparents ate real
people food and thrived. We are not talking Big Macs and French
fries, just fresh meats, whole grains and all the vegetables that
a dog could dig up in the garden. Sadly, today’s modern dog
suffers from the economics of food technology, which has failed
to live up to its claims of being a “natural” and “nutritionally
balanced” diet.
So, let's first ask the question,
what is an "all natural" dog food? I
believe the meaning of “natural” would have its roots
in Mother Nature herself and therefore be something that exists
in nature. Bags of kibble and cans
of dog food only exist on the shelves of pet food supermarkets!
So, the next time you are hunting down the aisles of your favorite
pet store, don’t fall for hyped-up advertising claims of dog
food being “all natural” or their newest
buzz word, “holistic”. Instead, grab
hold of your common sense and think about it. Is this how
you eat? Furthermore, there is nothing natural about forcing
your dog to eat the same diet day after day. And Mother Nature herself
never stopped to read the ingredients on a label. She simply designed
the ancestral dog to catch and kill prey animals. Remember the advertising
slogan used in a popular ad for margarine, “It’s not
nice to fool Mother Nature.” It carried a warning not to try
and imitate her genius!
Keep this warning in
mind the next time you visit the supermarket and do your dog a favor
by picking up a real bird! Still not convinced? Ask your dog what
he wants, baked chicken or the stuff in the bag? Without a doubt
your dog will gladly pass on a bag filled with inferior protein
sources, processed by-products, and preservatives. And for you die-hard
skeptics out there, ask yourself why you don't eat the same engineered
diet that has been formulated to "meet all your nutritional
needs" every day? Do you know how many grams of protein, units
of vitamin E, milligrams of calcium, and number of calories you
eat every day?
Let's face it folks, the billion
dollar pet food industry is thriving because of brainwashing ads,
endorsements by veterinarians who fail to recognize that people
are smart enough to cook for their dogs, and the sad fact that convenience
itself has become too popular in our everyday lives. Remember the
basic tenets of good nutrition: go for variety, choose fresh wholesome
ingredients, and avoid processed foods. Commercial pet foods violate
all the basic principals of this sound nutritional advice. For my
dogs and the clients that I council, the conversation pretty much
ends when I pop the final question: Would you eat anything labeled
as dog food?
Not
only do pet foods contain ingredients that dogs and cats were
not designed to eat, there is documentation that pet foods
can contain toxins and harmful bacteria and can make your
dog sick! |
Thanks be to those who challenge
the status quo and then prove it wrong. When I learned that Donald
Strombeck, DVM, PhD, a professor of mine who taught gastroenterology
at the School of Veterinary Medicine at U.C. Davis, CA,
had written a book entitled Home Prepared Dog and Cat Diets—the
Healthful Alternative, I knew he had something sobering
to say. At first I was simply reassured by his statement that diet
is one of the most important considerations in a pet's care and
that it is a major determinate of health and life expectancy. Wow,
after 40 years of his work in gastroenterology, my professor confirms
the connection between diet and health. He then goes on to blow
the whistle on the pet food industry! Not only did he report that
pet foods are not nutritionally complete and balanced, but sited
nutritional deficiencies that result from feeding prepared diets
that are very different from the diet of a foraging animal. Not
only do pet foods contain ingredients that dogs and cats were not
designed to eat, there is documentation that pet foods can contain
toxins and harmful bacteria and can make your dog sick!
How can this happen? Because
of the failure to regulate the pet food industry and set minimum
standards as to quality of ingredients used in the manufacturing
process. Bottom line: your dog is not protected from ingesting harmful
and even deadly contaminants. In short, our food supply is under
the watchful eye of the USDA . Anything labeled as pet food also
carries the warning: Not for human consumption! Is it any wonder
why veterinarians are called to treat so many mysterious cases of
vomiting and diarrhea, often labeled as inflammatory bowel disease
or food intolerance, which magically resolve when they are switched
to homemade diets…
If
you truly value the health of your dog, you cannot afford
to ignore the importance of good nutrition. What you choose
to feed your dog will ultimately decide his fate in terms
of health, longevity, and the quality of his life. So, add
some extra people food (poultry, fish, eggs, cottage cheese,
brown rice and veggies) to your grocery list and invite your
hungry dog back into the kitchen! |
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Paula Terifaj, DVM
is in small animal practice and is the owner of Founders Veterinary
Clinic, Brea CA. She has a special interest in preventative medicine
with a focus on nutrition to keep dogs healthy and uses her optimum
diet plan in the treatment of various illnesses. She is also the
founder of The DOGie Bag Bistro & Nutrition Center in Palm Springs,
CA and has developed homemade, take out meals to promote the benefits
of home cooking. For more information and recipes on how you can
easily cook homemade meals for your dog, visit www.dogiebag.com
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