Is Raw Cat Food Safe?

There is some concern about whether raw cat food is safe. Some feel that raw meat may contain salmonella, toxoplasmosis or another equally troublesome bacteria or parasite. And that the only way to be certain that your cat does not get these potentially fatal diseases is to cook the meat.

At first glance, this line of argument does appear to have some merit. But look a bit deeper.

Wild cats eat nothing else but raw meat and bones. Domestic cats, along with all other cats, have evolved on a diet of raw meat. Their digestive system only knows how to cope with this.

Cats, along with bears, are the only true carnivore. Their teeth show this very clearly. They are spiky for catching prey and powerful to crunch up bones. Their digestive track is short as raw meat is easy and quick to digest.

Humanity is generally under the illusion that they have improved on nature. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Holistic vets, as a body, can tell you that when you feed raw cat food, chronic degenerative disease melts away. Diseases like feline leukaemia, heart problems, sterility and tumours.

As Richard Kearns DVM puts it “I believe all cases of spinal myelopathy are caused by poor nutrition, sometimes going back to the mother’s nutrition during pregnancy”.

Richard Pitcairn DVM brings things into perspective. “Foods are so complex, we still don’t understand them. For example, researchers discovered that cats need taurine, an amino acid only found in animal tissue, which is lost through cooking. Now it is added to cat foods and supplements. Rather than wait for more such discoveries, it is better to provide animals with the diet that most closely resembles their evolutionary history”.

When you consider that cats have been evolving for hundreds of thousands of years, how could it be possible to have improved on their diet in the mere decades that commercial cat food has been available?

Lets look at salmonella. This is basically food poisoning by eating infected food. However, wild cats only eat the prey they have just killed. So the meat is super fresh, still warm in fact. Super fresh food does not carry infections. Infected food come from inadequate storage.

This is one reason why you will find cats are very fussy eaters. It’s because they know bad food when they see it. But because they still need to eat, domestic cats are left with little alternative but to eat the cat food they are given, if they are to survive.

The general guide here is to keep your cat’s raw meat super fresh.  Don’t keep it in the refrigerator longer than between two to four days, depending on the temperature of the refrigerator, how many times it is opened, the ambient temperature, etc. Freeze the rest and thaw out each meal as necessary.

Toxoplasmosis is rarely a serious illness in healthy individuals. It can be a major cause of serious illness in those with a damaged immune system or those on medication which lessens the effectiveness of the immune system. This is true for both cats and humans.

Wild cats can only survive with a very strong immune system. So their diet of raw meat and bones seems to serve them well.

Nino Aloro DVM confirms this to be the case. “Diet seems to be at the base of about 90% of the cases of cystitis that I see. When my clients observe the proper diet after initial treatment, there are rarely any of the normal relapses. If they put the pet back on commercial pet food, then the cystitis comes back.”

Only buy the freshest meat and be as sensible about the handling and storage of your cat’s raw meat as you are about your own. If your cat doesn’t like the food, suspect a problem. This could be meat starting to decompose or a chlorine wash on the meat, a process some butchers use to extend the life of the meat.

For a free ebook on how to have a healthy cat, starting today, visit http://www.bestcathealth.blogspot.com


Comments (4)

Carl Chase
Said this on 8-14-2009 At 10:11 pm
Good article. I'm considering raw for my kittyboys.
P Carlson
Said this on 8-23-2009 At 09:06 pm
Bears? "True carnivores"? Bears are among the more omnivorous members of order Carnivora. Bears eat many fruits and tubers, and even grass, especially in the spring. American Black bears actually eat very little meat. Polar bears, on the other hand, eat almost exclusively meat that they have hunted and killed.

The worry I have with raw diets is twofold:

1) You have no idea how clean the processing plants were that sent your raw poultry to the grocrery store. Humans can safely eat raw meat too - if it's clean. But there is a reason we generally cook it. I wish there were a sort of home salmonella test we could do on incoming poultry!

2) Wild animals' lives are generally very short: 1-5 years. Who's to say that a whild cat or dog doesn't die now and then from some spoiled meat?
Said this on 8-23-2009 At 10:36 pm
As I understand it, carnivores are those animals who cannot survive without meat, even if they can also eat plant material. Cats will eat vegetable matter, but they can't live without meat. I assume bears come into this category, even though many eat plant matter. Dogs can live purely on vegetable matter, so are omnivores.

Whilst I acknowledge your concerns about cleanliness in meat processing plants, there are many processes and stringent laws in place for the production of safe meat for human consumption. So if you buy human quality meat, and keep it properly, you will be fine. The best check you can possibly have is your animal. Cats are finicky eaters for a very good reason. When they eat raw food happily, then refuse some, suspect the quality or contamination. Dogs have what I call cast iron stomachs. They can happily eat rotten meat without a problem. But cooked meat is devoid of many essential nutrients so that's a different matter.

It comes down to what you have been taught. Much of it was incorrect just to make you buy a certain product. Whenever I have a problem, I turn to nature for the answers. As far as I'm concerned, no human can improve on nature. When we think we can, we are not taking into consideration the whole picture.
Willy
Said this on 4-25-2010 At 01:10 am

No Madeleine, dogs are NOT omnivores they are carnivores. They can live on only vegitable material for a limited time but, contrary to what vegans wish,  in order to be truly healthy they should be fed on a predominantly meat diet. When you feed a commercial diet that contains lots fo grains and veggies you will find that the volume of fecies produced is about 75-85% of the volume of food fed. This means that almost all of those wonderful veggies and cereals you fed to Fido simply passed through him UNDIGESTED. The lovely fragrence of his droppings is due to the bacterial decomposition of the food in Fido's gut i.e. it's rotting in there. This of coarse also contributes to his bloated stomach and flatulence. Contrast this with a dog fed raw meaty bones. No bloat, no gas and the fecies have a volume that's about 10% or less then what went in the other end i.e. the food is almost completely digested. Add to that the distinct LACK of crappy order and you have one happy dog owner in addition to one very healthy dog (works great for cats and ferrets too). But hey, don't take it from me. Do the research, all of the information is out there. Take advantage of it and both you and your animal will be happier and he'll be one hell of a lot healthier. Check out http://www.rawmeatybones.com it's a good place to start. Feel free to email me for more info on my own experiences with the raw meaty bones diet at wlansford@aol.com

 

Willy

 

 

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