DEFRA Launches Code of Practice for the Welfare of Cats

Poisonous to cats - anti-freeze

Poisonous to cats - anti-freeze

The Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has launced a code of practice for the welfare of cats under the Animal Welfare Act 2006.

The main requirements of the code are:

  • to provide a suitable environment
  • to provide a healthy diet
  • is protected from pain, suffering, illness and disease
  • ensuring that a cat has the ability and environment to behave normally
  • has appropriate company
  • has safe transportation equipment
  • has it’s own litter tray
  • has access to clean water
  • to be fed at least once a day
  • to include meat products in it’s diet
  • to microchip their pet or put a quick-release collar containing their contact details around it’s neck
  • to ensure the cat is kept away from potentially harmful substances
  • to ensure the cat is kept at a healthy weight
  • has opportunity to exercise each day
  • you must arrange for your cat’s needs to be met if you are away from home
  • you should regularly examine your cat for signs of injury or illness
  • your cat should be properly groomed 

Defra said: “Owning and caring for a pet is great fun and very rewarding, but it is also a big responsibility and a long-term financial and caring commitment. You control your pet’s lifestyle; it is your responsibility to make sure that its needs are met, whatever the circumstances.”

They recommend that cats should be provided with a scratching post and toys.  Particularly recommended are ‘puzzle’ feeders.

To read the full document, go here www.defra.gov.uk/corporate/consult/welfare-cats-cop/consultation.pdf

Pets Are Good For Your Health

American researchers have discovered that owning a pet can significantly reduce your risk of a common cancer. And that’s not all, says Emine Saner
Emine Saner The Guardian, Tuesday October 21 2008 Article history
The body of evidence supporting the notion that pet ownership is good for your health grew even fatter this month. A new study, published in Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention, found that keeping animals can cut the risk of developing the relatively common cancer of the immune system, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, by almost one third.

“The idea that pets and good health are associated goes back 20 years or more,” says Dr June McNicholas, a psychologist who has researched the relationship between people and their pets. The catalogue of health plusses can’t all be attributed to regular dogwalking however. When a study suggested that people who own pets have better cardiac health, says McNicholas, “one of the significant factors in people recovering well from a heart attack was owning a pet, but it wasn’t just dogs. It applied equally to cats.” Here are some of the many ways in which pets have been found to strengthen our constitutions.

Pets are good for cardiac health
The Baker Medical Research Institute in Australia studied 6,000 people and found that those who kept animals had lower blood pressure and lower cholesterol – and therefore, a lower risk of heart attack. Another study, conducted at the University of Minnesota and published earlier this year, concluded that cat owners were 40% less likely to suffer a fatal heart attack than people who didn’t have a cat. Adnan Qureshi, the neurology professor who led the study of nearly 4,500 people, said he believed that people who stroked their cat experienced less stress and anxiety and therefore were at a lower risk of developing cardiovascular diseases.

Pets boost the immune system
This month, a study by researchers from Stanford University and the University of California found that regular exposure to a cat or a dog could reduce one’s chance of developing non-Hodgkins lymphoma. It is thought that exposure to allergens – from cats and dogs – could boost the immune system.

The immune-boosting power of pets is something that McNicholas has also investigated. In 2002, she studied 256 primary school children and found that children aged from five to seven from pet-owning households attended school for three weeks more than those who didn’t. “We found that children brought up with pets had more stable immune systems. There have been other studies which suggest that children born into a household that already has a dog or a cat are less likely to develop asthma. Moderate exposure [to allergens] will prime the immune system.” Meanwhile, a study in Japan found that pet owners over the age of 65 made almost a third fewer visits to their GP than people the same age who didn’t have pets.

Dogs can act as a health warnings
After 20 years working for the charity Hearing Dogs for the Deaf, Claire Guest was struck by the story of a colleague whose dog had repeatedly sniffed at a mole on her leg before it was diagnosed as a malignant melanoma. Guest went on to work with researchers at Amersham hospital in Buckinghamshire, to discover whether dogs could be trained to detect bladder cancer in urine samples, and found that they could.

Similarly, in 2006, a cancer research centre in California published a study which found that ordinary household dogs could be trained to detect early breast and lung cancer between 88% and 97% of the time, by sniffing people’s breath – it is thought that these particular cancer cells give off miniscule traces of volatile odours that dogs can smell. The idea is that, once they have worked out which odours dogs are detecting and which cancers emit them, a diagnostic machine could be developed.

Guest also trains dogs to warn owners with Type 1 diabetes of an impending hypoglycaemic, or low blood sugar, episode – they usually alert their owners by jumping up. “We don’t know exactly how the dogs do it, but again they pick up on scent because they sniff the person before deciding whether to warn them or not. Because they also have a relationship with their owner, they may be able to pick up on other signs.”

Pets can improve self-esteem and decrease the likelihood of depression
“There have been studies that have suggested pet owners are more likely to have higher self-worth and are less likely to suffer loneliness and depression,” says Dr Deborah Wells, senior lecturer in psychology at the University of Belfast, who has conducted several studies on the benefits of pet ownership. “Dogs seem to bring people the biggest benefits – you have to get out and walk them every day, and they can act as a social catalyst.”

Wells says pets are particularly useful for children. “Pets can become like a therapist, for want of a better word. If children are bullied at school, or their parents are getting divorced, children will often tell their pets their problems whereas they wouldn’t always talk to a person.”

The charity Pets As Therapy has been running for 25 years and has 4,000 dogs and 106 cats, which visit 120,000 people in hospitals, hospices, care homes, day care centres and schools for children with special needs every week. “We started taking dogs into nursing homes, because elderly people had had to give up their pets when they went in and it was making them depressed and in many cases ill,” says Maureen Fennis, the chief executive. “At one nursing home, there was a lady who used to say the visits were her reason for staying alive.”

The routine and “normality” of having a pet can help people suffering a traumatic event, such as bereavement or a diagnosis of terminal illness. In one study, McNicholas found that people with animals to care for adjusted far better after the death of someone close than those without pets. “We live in a society where we do not like to cry in front of people,” she adds, “but there are a large number of people who can cry in front of their pets” ·

Angel the Pitbull Cross Saves Lives of Kittens

Here’s a story for all the defenders of the pit bull:

A 2-year-old female boxer/pit bull mix named Angel, which had been turned over to the Nevada Humane Society’s shelter in Reno, is credited with rescuing six abandoned kittens Monday, according to Diane Blankenburg, a shelter spokeswoman.

While Angel was on a walk with a pair of volunteers, Frank Gomez and 9-year-old stepson Joel Fontes

Angel and Volunteers

Angel and Volunteers

(pictured below with Angel), the dog became obsessed with something in the bushes.

With temperatures in the 90s on Monday, the two volunteers tried to initially coax the dog away from the bush.

But when Angel refused to move on, Gomez investigated and discovered a box full of 3-week-old orange tabby kittens that were frightened and hungry.

One of the abandoned kittens escaped before shelter staff was summoned to the scene, but Angel tracked it down and Gomez handed it over to safety.

Angel is up for adoption but the kittens won’t be available for about four to five weeks, Blankenburg said.

Pit bulls are chronically challenging to adopt out because of their reputation as aggressive, violent dogs, so Blankenburg said she hoped Angel’s story might help remove the stigma often associated with the breed.

“Angel is a sweet, playful dog who can now add hero to her repertoire,” Blankenburg said. “Angel, herself a rescued dog, has paid back six-fold by rescuing these six little abandoned kittens.”
–Francisco Vara-Orta

Chinese Cats Grow ‘Wings’

Tom cats in Sichuan province in southern China have sprouted wing-like growths on their backs, which locals are attributing to the hot summer weather and the romantic attentions of females.
One animal started to develop the “wings” during a period of hot weather in Sichuan, a large province in southern China where a devastating earthquake struck this spring.

Although the growths appear fluffy, they contain bone. But veterinary experts say that despite the hard inner core, the flaps do not harm the cat’s quality of life or safety.

Several animals were photographed with the furry protuberances by a local newspaper photographer.

“At first they were just two bumps, but they started to grow quickly, and after a month there were two wings,” said one cat’s owner, who was only identified as Feng.

“Many female cats in heat came to harass him, and then the wings started to grow,” she told the local Huashang News.

Although Feng attributed her pet’s condition to the stress of a feline love life and the hot Sichuan summer. However, scientists said the wings had a less romantic explanation.

Chinese Cats Grow Wings

Chinese Cats Grow Wings

In fact, the hairy growths probably developed because of unusual grooming habits, a genetic defect or a hereditary skin condition.

Cat Survives 7 Weeks Stuck Behind Bathroom Wall

When Monika Hoppert couldn’t find her pet cat Bonny, she became very worried. It wasn’t like the four-year-old feline to suddenly go missing. She looked everywhere but couldn’t find any sign of her beloved pet and was beginning to fear the worst.

But then the 60-year-old German woman, who lives in the western town of Stadthagen, was contacted by a neighbour, who told her she kept hearing a strange meowing sound coming from her bathroom but couldn’t find the source.

And that’s when Hoppert’s mind travelled back to June 19th, when workmen came to her apartment complex to replace some old pipes on her block. They removed some of the wall near one of the baths and she was stunned to contemplate that her cat may have crawled inside that opening before the unknowing crew sealed it back up.

The animal had been missing for seven weeks. Surely it couldn’t still be alive?

Hoppert wasn’t willing to give up.

It was August 8th and the frantic pet owner had the wall taken down in an effort to be sure. It was worth the mess, expense and trouble because the cat popped out of it’s enclosed prison, thinner and weaker, but still very much alive.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Hoppert marvels. “But when I got down there, I knew it was my cat because they all have their own voice …

“It’s a miracle. I’m a strong believer, I think she must have had a guardian angel. I’m so happy.”

The tabby had gone from 13 lbs. to just four in the nearly two months it had been sealed in and vets suggested it be put down. But Monika wasn’t about to let her ‘miracle’ cat give up the last eight of it’s nine lives without a fight.

So she carefully and lovingly nursed it back to health, giving it watered-down kitten food. Weeks later, the animal is showing signs of getting back to normal. “This morning was the first time she’d jumped onto my bed again,” the pleased owner relates.

It’s not clear if Hoppert intends to keep her treasured pet out of the bathroom in future.

Wednesday August 27, 2008