Wednesday, November 29, 2006

The weight ends

So after pouring through feline nutrition papers by veterinarians such as Deborah Greco and Deb Zoran, I felt invigorated! Their writings were a breath of fresh air that went against conventional wisdom and simply made sense. The idea was to consider that cats have been around for millions of years hunting for their food, but now we were feeding them something very different. We were making a strict carnivore eat like an omnivore - we were making a creature built for protein get by on carbohydrates.

If you want a bit more detail on this subject, find the weblink "Feline Weight Management" under the "General Linx" section of our website.

So I broke the news to my mother - unless she wanted her cat to become a painful arthritic patient, she was going to have to stop feeding dry food and switch to a high protein canned food. Now, as it stands, I am her only child. She hid her disdain for the idea very well.

Next person I remember talking to is a colleague of mine who I hold in extremely high regard. Given that he too works at an all cat facility, I was eager to hear what he was doing with this new information. Turns out he was watching and waiting, wanting to see what happens as other veterinarians go thru the trouble of explaining the latest in feline nutrition.

Well, I wasn't go to let his skepticism hold me down. I was young and eager and ready to spread the good news! What happened after that was very educational. I discovered the bumps in the road. Here's the short list:
  • some cats will not eat wet food
  • some people will not buy wet food (smell and cost)
  • many cats are psychotic about an empty food bowel
  • many people like to travel
  • no one likes to be awakened in the night by their cat
  • old habits are hard to break
  • traditionally quiet cats can discover they have vocal cords
  • some people get offended when you suggest their cat is obese

Ahhhhhh, discouragement! But, there have been successes! There's my own cat who has become much more active since maintaining her lean body weight of seven pounds. There is Stevie who dropped four pounds and became much more playful. Best of all is Sebastian who went from the low 20's to around 13 pounds - given that his owner drops in frequently for supplies, their accomplishment enters my mind often and encourages me to keep an optimistic view for future patients.

Returning back to my original story (see previous post), it looks like I have two more cats to add to the list. The reason that they weighed significantly less than before is because at the prior examination, we had talked about current feline nutrition and the guy decided to give it a go. When I asked him what he did to make it work, he responded that he just stopped the dry food and switched to canned... He acted like it was as simple as changing a lightbulb! Why can't it be that easy every time???

2 Comments:

At 9:24 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

You should be proud of the great work you do education us cat caregivers (I do not own my cat, so I'll never call myself an owner!). We may be slow to act on the info you give, but it does slowly sink in. I think some of us are sensative about our cats being labeled obese because of our own weight management issues, and it is also an unintentional criticism of us as caregivers - our cat is fat so we are bad. there is a lot of psychology wheeling around food and weight, but keep fighting the battle. Stevie and the gang are all worth the work!

 
At 11:20 AM, Blogger Heather Guerrero said...

Thank you for this blog, it is a great education tool.

Raw food diet takes this concept a step further. Our three cats love it and they look healthy and lean.

 

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