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Dr. Michael W. Fox

Some Manufactured Pet Food Issues & Solutions

Provided by friend and fellow pet food safety advocate Dr. Michael W. Fox…

Provided by friend and fellow pet food safety advocate Dr. Michael W. Fox…

Aside from a host of various chemical additives, some of the highly processed ingredients in cat and dog foods can cause chronic health problems which have helped create a market for costly special prescription diets, along with various diagnostic tests and treatments. Many of these problems and simple solutions have been documented in my book, co-authored by two other veterinarians, Not Fit For a Dog: The Truth About Manufactured Cat & Dog Foods. For instance, soy is used as a cheap source of protein which is linked to thyroid disease in dogs and possibly cats whose high iodine-content fish-byproduct food ingredients play a role in the virtual epidemic of thyroid disease in cats. Cereals such as corn and wheat which have no place in a cat’s diet and can harm dogs, in contrast to a meat-based diet, make the urine alkaline and may cause cystitis and struvite crystal formation, an all too common lower urinary tract issue for companion animals. They are also high in gluten which triggers the intestines to release the protein zonulin. This creates openings in the gut wall, which then becomes more permeable to large molecule proteins, the so called leaky gut syndrome, leading to ever more food-intolerance, malabsorption of nutrients, allergies and even autoimmune disease.

Reading the labels on some of the new cat and dog foods from main-stream pet food manufacturers (now proclaiming “grain free’ and “no soy”) it is clear that the industry is cognizant of these concerns but continues to deny scientific documentation and evidence-based veterinary medicine, and instead claims to be catering to public demand. While profiting from this, I do not endorse the products from these multinational companies who, for decades, have marketed pet foods that have caused much harm and expense to cat and dog owners and who are now jumping on the band wagon of more healthful pet foods in full denial of their past sins of omission and commission. Further market and consumer confusion is created, just as with the human prepared food industry, when these big companies incorporate smaller companies with good names and quality brands. So we must all read the ingredient labels, the content of which these companies would like limited as its lobbyists work the halls of government and oppose consumer initiatives, as with the labeling of GMO ingredients. The rights of consumers to make informed decisions in the market place for themselves and their companion animals is a right in any democratic society, and would be enlightened corporate interest for the human and subsidiary pet food industries to respect because more and more consumers are informed and they will ultimately vote with their dollars in the market place.

 

By Michael W. Fox BVetMed, PhD, DSc, MRCVS Veterinarian, bioethicist, syndicated columnist (Animal Doctor with Universal-UClick). Website www.DrFoxVet.com

Author of Supercat: How to Raise the Perfect Feline Companion: also Cat Body, Cat Mind, and Dog Body, Dog Mind with National Book Network; The Healing Touch for Dogs and The Healing Touch for Cats with Harper Collins & co-author of Not Fit for a Dog: The Truth About Manufactured Cat & Dog Foods with Quill Driver Books

6 Comments

6 Comments

  1. Casey

    January 17, 2015 at 12:11 pm

    Except you can’t trust what’s on the label, either!

  2. Pingback: Some Manufactured Pet Food Issues & Solutions | dogosearch.com

  3. Pat P.

    January 18, 2015 at 9:27 am

    Once you get past the ingredients on the label, which may or may not be truthful, then you have to worry about the quality of the ingredients inside. Both of these are serious and potentially problematic issues, which makes me believe, that there are very few commercial pet foods (feed?) healthy or safe enough to feed my cat!

  4. Peter

    January 22, 2015 at 9:34 am

    Dr. Fox accurately describes the adversarial relationship that pet food manufacturers have with the customers that buy their products and support them. The industry works to deceive and it seems often, to simply cheat consumers… while simultaneously opposing common sense regulation or disclosure.

    One of the worst trends is the reformulation (uh… “improvement”) of so many pet food formulations. But researching ingredients list rarely provides the information we need, such as Dr. Fox describes. Educated from this site, we know that “improved” really means cheaper ingredients. Consumers should expect consistency and quality from wet cat foods, for example that work out to excess of $6 a pound. Many of the so-called “premium” and “ultra premium” foods are changing to “flaked” or “cubed” texture, which frankly, anyone can realize that is just a means to decrease the ingredients (it’s akin to comparing a bowl of M&Ms to the same size bowl of packed fudge… the M&Ms have all those spaces and air pockets). Also, many foods are very clearly mis or falsely labeled: the water content in many of these expensive foods is very clearly more than the stated “maximum”: when you can pour food out of a can like soup, you simply aren’t getting much “food” for your buck.

  5. mina

    February 3, 2015 at 8:14 am

    Hello everyone, I feed my cat weruva cat in the kitchen, wet canned food, what do you think? Is it good for the cat?. Thank you.

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Pet Food is regulated by federal and state authorities. Unfortunately, authorities ignore many safety laws. Click Here to learn more about the failures of the U.S. pet food regulatory system.

 

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