Diet and Exercise
Eating right and staying fit with regular exercise is not just good advice for people, it is good advice for pets too. Maintaining a healthy weight, eating high quality nutritious foods, and keeping a strong body through exercise are cornerstones to wellness throughout a lifetime.
As Americans struggle with being one of the most overweight nations in the world, our perspective of our pet’s weight is also changing. According to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention (APOP) pet obesity rates have been rising for several years. As of 2012, 53 percent of dogs and 58 percent of cats are either overweight or obese, and 22 percent of dog owners said their pet was normal weight when their dog was actually overweight.
These extra pounds put our pets at increased risk for many of the same diseases people who encounter obesity face, including a life expectancy shortened by 2.5 years. It is not a matter of “if” a pet will contract one of the diseases listed below, it is more a matter of “when” a pet will contract the disease if he keeps the pounds on.
- Arthritis
- Cranial cruciate ligament injury
- Diabetes
- High blood pressure
- Heart and respiratory disease
- Kidney disease
- Certain Cancers – especially intra-abdominal cancers