Skip To Content

4 Red-Flag Ingredients Sneaking Into Your Pet Food

Ingredient label of a grocery-store brand of adult, dry, dog food I'm always enthused to share my holistic veterinary perspective on a variety of pet health topics, but having the opportunity to speak on the topic of nutrition is especially important to me.
I’m a firm believer that feeding your pet a nutritionally complete and balanced, human-grade, whole-food diet is the healthier option as compared to a commercially-available, feed-grade, processed-food diets that most owners feed.
Besides making a home-prepared food for your pet, there are many options available to owners now that are readily accessible through local stores or home delivery. Generally, the preparation is quite simple in terms of defrosting and slightly warming or hydrating with warm water.
What many owners don’t consider is that when a commercially-available, feed-grade, processed-food diet is fed there are often ingredients that are lower-quality than human-grade options that could cause health problems in your pets on a short or long-term basis. Such is why I recommend owners heavily scrutinize the ingredients in the foods and treats provided as meals or snacks and ask themselves if they would be willing to eat foods having comparable ingredients (and if they won’t then why do they feel it’s the right choice for their pet).
I recently weighed in on this topic for Greatist.com. When assessing the ingredient profile, make sure to be aware of the 4 Red-Flag Ingredients Sneaking Into Your Pet Food (click link to read full article).
Hopefully, by abiding by the recommendations of what not to feed your pet he will stay healthy for many years to come.
Dr. Patrick Mahaney
Please leave your constructive perspective in the below Comments section and communicate with me and follow my adventures in veterinary medicine and life via Instagram (@PatrickMahaney), Twitter (@PatrickMahaney), and Facebook (Patrick Mahaney: Veterinarian Acupuncture Pain Management for Your Pets).
Copyright of this article (2018) is owned by Dr. Patrick Mahaney, Veterinarian, Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist and Certified Veterinary Journalist. Republishing any portion of this article must first be authorized by Dr. Patrick Mahaney. Requests for republishing must be approved by Dr. Patrick Mahaney and received in written format.
Back To Top