Everyday I am asked by at least one pet owner,
"Doctor Baum, what is the best food?" They are usually pleasantly
surprised by the simplicity of my answer: "The best food is one
that your pet likes and one that agrees with his or her system."
There are really no bad foods out there. All of the major brand
foods are more than adequate nutritionally. This includes the
unfairly scorned supermarket brands.
Common sense tells us that puppies and kittens
should be fed diets that reflect the increased nutritional demands
of their rapidly growing bodies. Senior pets should be fed diets
which reflect their needs for foods that lessen the work load on
their aging organs. Animals with specific medical needs such as
kidney disease, urinary tract stone formation, or inflammatory bowel
disease, to name a few, have the good fortune to have specific
prescription diets that are tailored to their needs, and readily
available from their veterinarians.
The pet food industry boom has spawned what i
like to call, "the fringe diets." These diets profess to be
"natural" and imply that they are free of preservatives.
Unfortunately, it would be impossible to market a food that doesn't
have preservatives because in the time that it would take for the
unpreserved food to find its consumers, it would spoil. The reason
that there are no fatty acid deficiencies in pets today is a
reflection of the ability of the preservatives to prevent the fat
from becoming rancid.
Another newcomer on the pet food scene is the
"raw food diet." While these diets may keep more of the nutrients
that are destroyed by cooking and processing, they are generally
more difficult to digest and although more nutrients may enter
through the mouth, you can be sure that more leave through the feces
due to lack of digestibility. Our pets today are a far cry from
their feral ancestors who needed to hunt for their food -- their
digestive systems today have acclimated to today's prepared foods
(as have ours).
Clients often ask about the advisability of
feeding food from the table. Within the realm of common sense (no
spicy, high fat foods) this is ok to do as long as the cause and
effect rule is satisfied -- that is, no digestive upsets. The
manner in which table food is fed is important. If your pet walks
away from the pet food that is offered and you give it a piece of
chicken, you are actually training it to reject the pet food by
rewarding this behavior. A better way would be to give this treat
as dessert for a meal that was just consumed. For those of you who
can't resist cooking for your pet, be sure to prepare a mixture of
foods that reflect a balanced diet -- meat, vegetables and starches
such as rice or potatoes.
A quick note about premium diets -- the overuse
of these high fat content diets is one of the major causes of
obesity. Most pets are simply not active enough to benefit from the
higher calories that these diets supply. As for using superior
ingredients, does a fillet mignon really have any more nutritional
value than hamburger meat? Think about it.