P&G Issues Limited Cat Food Recall in Colorado

Source: Pet Product News International, Aug 30, 2010

Due to salmonella concerns, Procter & Gamble (P&G) is voluntarily recalling a limited number of bags of its Iams Proactive Health Indoor Weight & Hairball Care dry cat food, which according to the company, may have been sold in a couple of stores in Loveland, Colo.

The recalled product comes in blue 6.8-pound bags and features a code date of 02304173 (B1-B6) and the UPC number 1901403921. No other Iams pet food products are affected.

P&G reported it has worked with retailers to remove the product from stores in Loveland. The company said it believes three bags may have been purchased recently by consumers in the area. No illnesses have been reported.

Pets with salmonella infections may be lethargic and have diarrhea or bloody diarrhea, fever, and vomiting. Some pets may have decreased appetite, fever and abdominal pain. Infected but otherwise healthy pets can be carriers and infect other animals or humans, according to the company. Cat owners are urged to contact their veterinarian if their pet has consumed the recalled product and is exhibiting these symptoms.

Humans can also become infected, especially if they have not thoroughly washed their hands after having contact with the cat food or surfaces exposed to the recalled product, according to the company. Symptoms in humans may include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever and headache. Children, the elderly and people with compromised immune systems are particularly susceptible to infection, according to the company.

Consumers who have purchased Iams Proactive Health Indoor Weight & Hairball Care dry cat food are urged to discard the product and call P&G toll-free at 800-862-3332 Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. EST for a product replacement

House votes to ban surgical dog ‘debarking’, MA

Source: BostonHerald.com, Mar 4, 2010

The Massachusetts House has voted overwhelmingly to ban the surgical “debarking” or silencing of dogs or cats.

By a 150-1 vote, the House on Wednesday approved the bill with prohibits the devocalization of dogs and cats unless a licensed veterinarian certifies that the procedure is medically necessary to relieve an illness, disease or injury.

Animal rights groups pushed for the bill, saying the practice amounts to animal cruelty and poses only risks to the pets.

Some dog owners opt for the procedure as a last ditch effort to try to quiet chronically barking dogs.

The bill now heads to the Senate.

Dogs Enjoy Increased Health Protection with Natural Defense(TM)

Source: EarthTimes.org, Feb 10, 2010

Green tea, marigolds, flaxseed and chicory root – ingredients with scientifically-proven properties typically found in health food stores – have been combined with the latest in nutritional research to offer dogs complete, natural protection in common areas of health with the launch of Natural Defense™ premium food for dogs.

Developed by an expert team of veterinarians and pet nutritionists and manufactured in Canada, the entire Natural Defense™ product line features a variety of natural extracts plus vitamins, minerals and other trace nutrients scientifically proven to proactively support dog well-being in five key areas – immune health, joint health, digestive health, oral health and skin and coat health. Free of artificial colours or flavours, Natural Defense™ products come in an adult dry formula as well as in three healthy snack varieties which, when fed regularly, provide an added level of defense to a dog’s oral, digestive and joint health. Natural Defense™ products will be available at major retailers nation-wide in early February.

“With the Natural Defense™ brand we have provided dog owners with a scientifically-proven, natural approach to proactively support their pet’s well-being and overall health,” said Sandra Hinojosa, product development manager, Mars Canada™. “One example of improvement we saw during our initial trials were dogs that had regained their playfulness and energy levels after six weeks of daily feeding of Natural Defense™ Joint Health snacks and were once again able to undertake normal activities like running, jumping and climbing stairs”.

Key areas of health for dogs

The development of the Natural Defense™ brand addresses the growing consumer demand for pet food that features natural extracts scientifically proven to proactively support the areas of health that are of primary concern to dog owners.

A 2005 study found that 80 per cent(1) of dogs over the age of three may have oral care issues, which typically range from poor teeth and gums, as well as halitosis, more commonly referred to as ‘dog breath’. One in five dogs over the age of one(2) have been observed to experience mobility issues, which could be attributed in part to the rapid growth rate of puppies (approximately 12 times faster than human babies(3)). This can translate to extra wear and tear on joints while they are still forming. And while it may appear that dogs are able to eat just about anything, their digestive system differs greatly from humans. The transit time for food traveling through a dog’s digestive system is 12 to 30 hours, while humans can take up to five days, making digestive health important to ensure food is properly utilized by the body. Finally, the condition of the skin and coat is very important to a dog’s overall health as they have thinner skin compared to humans(4) which also must act as a protective barrier against external factors.

“As many of us strive to remain fit and active as we age, we are also looking to ensure our pets will age gracefully with us, so they can enjoy as much as possible, the vitality and vigour they had as puppies throughout their life” said Hinojosa. “As with humans, there has been a significant movement from reactive to a proactive approach to promote pet health and wellbeing. By feeding products like those in the Natural Defense™ product line-up, we can take a proactive approach to our pet’s health with products that leverage science and nature to help protect them.”

Mother Nature’s defenses at work

Similar to natural extracts, vitamins and minerals taken by humans to improve their overall health and wellness, Natural Defense™ premium dry dog food and healthy snacks leverage some of the most well-known and documented ingredients to help aid in dog well-being and quality of life in key areas:

Immune Health – Marigold extract, vitamins E & C and taurine provide an added level of defense against everyday challenges to the immune system

- Marigold has been valued for centuries as a powerful antioxidant that also supports eye health

- Vitamin C acts as an antioxidant to help boost immune function and enhance iron absorption

- Vitamin E, an immune enhancing antioxidant, helps protect the skin

- Taurine, known for its antioxidant activity, helps stabilize cell membranes

Joint Health – Omega 3 from flax seed plus glucosamine, a natural component derived from shrimp shells, supports fundamental joint care protection

- Omega 3 helps preserve joint lubrication by protecting the synovial fluid and membranes which provide a cushion-like protection to joints

- Glucosamine is a key building block for joints

Digestive health – Whole wheat, barley and sugar beet pulp promote optimal digestive health

- Whole grains and fibers are a great source of carbohydrates, which provides energy needed for dogs to be active

- The combination of grains and fibres in Natural Defense™ Premium Dry Food provides dogs with an optimal balance of soluble and insoluble fiber to promote proper digestion and help protect their health

Oral Health – Myrtle leaf and green tea extract are natural botanicals that help support oral health

- Myrtle is proven to help manage bacteria associated with plaque formation which promotes healthy gums

- The patented texture of the Oral Health Snack helps to clean down to the gum line

- Green tea helps promote fresh breath

“For years, we have educated humans on foods that have a beneficial effect on health, and how eating a variety of nutrient-rich foods can support overall health and wellness,” said Amy Snider-Whitson, a food and nutrition trend expert. “It comes as no surprise that we are seeing these same natural extracts, such as flaxseed, barley, vegetable oils and green tea, benefiting dogs in a similar way and helping owners proactively promote protection for life.”

Natural Defense™ premium dry food is available in 3 kg and 6.8 kg bags, with a manufacturer’s suggested price of $13.99 and $24.99, respectively. Digestive Health Snacks are available in 400g pouches with an MSRP price of $4.99; Joint Health Snacks in 154g cartons with a MSRP of $6.99; and Oral Health Snacks in 150g cartons in both medium and large sizes, with a MSRP of $6.99.

Organic Dog Food Company Reveals New Online Ordering System

Source: OnlinePRNews

Baton Rouge, LA, August 25, 2009 – Jake’s Cuisine today announced the launch of www.jakescuisine.com to take online orders for customers who want to purchase their all natural dog food products directly from the website. Shopping for a dog food nowadays can

Online PR News – 26-August-2009 – Baton Rouge, LA, August 25, 2009 – Jake’s Cuisine today announced the launch of www.jakescuisine.com to take online orders for customers who want to purchase their all natural dog food products directly from the website. Shopping for a dog food nowadays can be tricky and Jake’s Cuisine has made it easy by creating an all natural product with certified organic herbs, grains and vegetables that you can purchase directly online, along with free shipping.

Jake’s Cuisine uses deep freeze packaging to keep their products fresh. They use plenty of dry ice and are shipped by United States Postal Office flat rate box with insulated packaging. Owners of the Jake’s Cuisine said that the demand for the healthier alternatives of dog food has been increasing from the last some years, and have provided a fresh alternative for homeowners dogs.

Kay Baucum of Baton Rouge states, “After a week of not wanting water, Edison ate some of Jake’s Cuisine. He has been eating it ever since and grown healthier every day. The vets were amazed.”

People who switched to Jake’s Cuisine confess that their dogs are happier and a lot vibrant. This type of dog food also helps keep an environment-friendly setting both for humans and dogs.

About Jake’s Cuisine: Since 1986, has been providing dog lovers with the ultimate in premium nutrition and gourmet dining for your best friend, with our premium organic dog food made with only the best, all natural products.

Jake’s Cuisine believes that food is the first step to a long, happy and healthy life and a proper diet can be a preventative step to combat future ill-health. We constantly innovate, in order to provide the most healthy, delicious nutrition for the dogs that are you in your life.

Dogs and 2-Year-Olds on Same Mental Plane

Source: AJC.com

MONDAY, Aug. 10 (HealthDay News) — According to accumulating research, the beloved family dog is really a toddler with a snout and tail.

“Dogs basically have the developmental abilities equivalent to a human 2-year-old,” said dog expert Stanley Coren, who was scheduled to present recent canine research developments at the American Psychological Association annual meeting this week in Toronto.

The average dog can learn 165 words, although “super dog” Rico, a border collie, could understand 200 spoken words. Experts think some dogs can learn up to 250 words.

Dogs can count up to four or five and can correct you if you can’t add one plus one.

One dog apparently learned to “read.” Coren recounted the case of the canine who was able to “deliver” mail addressed to two girls, one with a short name and one with a long name. Although the owner thought the dog was actually reading, it turns out the canine was gauging the length of the name, not the individual characters, enabling him to deliver the mail to the right person.

Different breeds of dog differ in their intelligence, with border collies topping the list for working (instinctive) and obedience intelligence. The next six smartest are poodles, German shepherds, golden retrievers, Dobermans, Shetland sheepdogs and Labrador retrievers. (The third type of dog smarts is adaptive or problem-solving ability.)

“There are two extreme viewpoints when we talk about dogs,” said Coren, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and author of numerous books on dogs including How to Speak Dog and How Dogs Think. “Some tend to think of dogs as if they are little human beings with fur coats. The other extreme is to think of dogs as if they’re unthinking but programmable robots. My little beagle would then be a beagle-shaped bag, a biological equivalent of transistors and gears. The truth of the matter is somewhere in between.”

More and more, scientists are realizing that dogs can think and solve problems in ways previously thought to belong only to humans and higher primates.

Indeed, one recent study also found that dogs were like 24-month-old children, at least when it comes to figuring out where humans have hidden a treat.

Like 2-year-olds, dogs can experience fear, anger, happiness and disgust (perhaps at a human’s sub-par math skills), but not guilt. Humans don’t feel guilt until about age 4, Coren said.

That doesn’t mean they can’t make humans feel guilty. That desolate look when a dog’s human leaves the house is probably legitimate. “Dogs are pack animals,” Coren explained.

Dogs apparently can ponder the meaning of “dog,” in a way. According to Coren, they do have a consciousness of self, though not as complex as that of humans.

They also recognize differences among beings and are cognizant of others’ variable viewpoints and talents.

And they dream, as demonstrated through movements they make while they’re asleep.

Dogs can figure out how to get to the couch before you do and how to operate a latch or other simple mechanism.

They can also deceive other dogs.

Not to mention people.

Coren has both a beagle (ranked seventh from the bottom in obedience intelligence) and a cat. The cat is fed on the counter so the beagle can’t interfere with feline meal-time.

One time, though, the beagle started scrabbling around, digging at the kitchen floor. “I was quite confused,” Coren recalls. “He looked around and continued again, then he looked up at me. I finally got down on my hands and knees and he immediately jumped onto my back and onto the counter. He decided his psychologist father could be used as a ladder.”

“This presentation asks and answers some very deep questions about if, and then how, dogs might think,” said Bonnie Beaver, a professor in the department of small animal clinical sciences at the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences at Texas A&M University. “[But] there is always the possibility that generalizations do not quite fit the data or that the original data may have been weak. Serious students of dogs are advised to go back to original studies, lovers of dogs should view this with interest and leave a little room for doubts.”

Pasco Petland owner denies puppy mill allegations, WA

Source: TheNewsTribune.com, June 30, 2009

Owners of the Pasco Petland store on Monday denied charges the store gets its puppies from mills and brokers who mistreat animals that they crank out for profit.

“I never would’ve opened this (store) if there were shady things going on,” said co-owner Dan Miner. “I mean, there’s too much money at stake to do things like that.”

Miner’s comments were in response to a report the Humane Society of the United States released Monday that claimed more than 95 percent of Petland stores have bought dogs from large-scale brokers or directly from puppy mills in the past few months.

The Humane Society, a national animal protection organization separate from the Benton-Franklin Humane Society that operates a shelter in Kennewick, used public documents to trace shipments of more than 15,000 puppies from commercial brokers to Petland stores.

The Humane Society said the Pasco Petland — the only Petland store in Washington — gets its puppies from Mid-America Pet Broker LLC of Neosho, Mo.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture earlier this year cited the broker for buying from breeders without verifying that they were licensed, for using expired and incorrect medications and for using cages that were too small, the Humane Society reported.

Miner acknowledged the Pasco Petland gets the majority of its puppies from Mid-America, but he said the broker hasn’t mistreated animals as the Humane Society portrays.

“Absolutely not,” Miner said. “I would stake my building on it. I wouldn’t do business with them if that was the case.”

Miner said he wasn’t concerned with Mid-America’s past citations, saying just because a driver gets a traffic citation doesn’t mean they shouldn’t drive anymore. If anything, the citations showed the USDA was doing its job, he said.

He also showed a March 2 inspection record of Mid-America that reported no violations at the time.

All puppies sold at Pasco’s Petland receive three parvovirus shots before the store even gets the animals, and they receive physical exams from Coleman Animal Health Center before they are made available for sale.

Of the 700 puppies that have gone through the store since it opened last July, only three were found to have parvo, Miner said.

Nevertheless, the Humane Society recommended consumers not buy puppies from pet stores or internet sites, but instead buy from an animal shelter or a breeder’s facility that they can inspect in person.

Puppy mill dogs typically receive little to no medical care, live in squalid conditions with no exercise, socialization or human interaction and are confined inside cramped wire cages for life, the Humane Society said.

Know The Content Of Your Pet’s Food

Source: (CBS News) “I fed my cat the wrong food, and it killed her.”

Heather Lyons, of Elgin, Ill., says her cat, Gizmo, ate food tainted with melamine. It’s an industrial chemical found in wheat gluten made in China, and its presence triggered the largest pet food recall in history.

“The vet told us she had kidney failure,” Lyons said to The Early Show‘s resident veterinarian, Dr. Debbye Turner Bell. “A couple of days later on the news, I saw the massive pet food recall.”

Lyons says when she realized the food she thought was safe and of high quality killed Gizmo, “It made my stomach turn.”

She returned to buying canned cat food. Even so, she’s still not quite sure what’s in the cans — like millions of Americans.

Pet food is big business, Bell reports. Americans spend $16 billion on it every year.

But many owners probably have no idea what that food is made from.

And, says Bell, the huge pet food recall of 2007 reminded us what we don’t know about the contents of pet food can hurt our pets.

One woman in the Prairie Wolf Dog Exercise Area in Lake Forest, Ill., told Bell she had “no idea” what’s in her dog’s food. When told the third ingredient is beef byproducts, the woman admitted she doesn’t know what that means and, “I wouldn’t want to know, I don’t think.”

Bell remarked to another woman, “If I told you it’s whole carcasses, and could include beaks, feathers, might be a little manure — it’s just all been cooked in a big vat…”

“That would make me sick,” the woman interrupted Bell.

Legally, Bell explains, byproducts can include part of the lungs, brain, blood, stomach and intestines. And 64 percent of the people surveyed recently by Wellness Pet Food didn’t know the contents of meat byproducts.

“I feel bad,” the first woman in the park continued. “I mean, outside of my husband and my kids, he’s like one of the most important things in my life, and I… I don’t know what I’m feeding him (my dog).”

Dr. Edward Moser, a veterinary nutritionist, says pet owners need to care about ingredients: “When you look at a pet who’s not receiving adequate nutrition, the things you see are dull, discolored eyes, watery eyes, red eyes. You see poor skin and coat condition.”

Turner observed that, “It’s really important to read the ingredients on the label. And the first few ingredients should be words you understand, like meat, grain, fruit or vegetables. And avoid a brand that has too many of the four “A”s: artificial ingredients, preservatives, flavors, and colors. And if your pet has a sensitive stomach, avoid foods that produce allergies: corn, wheat, dairy, eggs, soy and beef. Of course, none of this matters if the food we feed our pets is not safe.”

What’s more, says Dr. Marion Nestle, the author of “Pet Food Politics,” pet food is “regulated in the most bizarre way. There’s no real oversight of national regulation for pets, except for a few things that are on the labels of the cans and packages.”

And that, says pet advocates, is how melamine ended up in pet food in the first place.

And it’s why Heather Lyons, the one whose cat died, joined a class action lawsuit against Menu Foods, the manufacturer that sold the melamine-tainted wheat gluten.

“Basically,” she says, “what I want to happen is the government to regulate the pet food better. I don’t really care about the money; I just want to make sure everyone has a safe pet.”

The reality is, most pet food isn’t going to kill your pet — unless, of course, there’s some contamination in it, Bell says.

She adds that wet food simply has a higher water content than dry pet food. “If your pet tends to overeat, wet food is not the best, because they love it and want to eat a whole lot of it! A dry food for a normal healthy adult animal, particularly dogs that are active I think is the best. Use the wet food as a treat. If you have a picky eater, use the wet food.”

And the best advice should come from “your veterinarian. Work out nutrition plan and the number of calories your pet gets. Obesity is a huge problem for people and our pets and we have to be careful about that.”

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