signal boost: Purina food could be hurting your pets
Thanks to
siderea for pointing me to this post about problems with Purina pet food (dog and cat, at least). After seeing this I read the last several month's worth of consumer-affiars complaints, and older ones about the specific foods relevant to me. (Warning: can be gross.) This goes well beyond "ew, yuck" to "get that stuff out of the house before it contaminates anything else". Fortunately I don't use their dry food (infestations), but I do -- or did, until now -- use Friskies canned food (toxins) sometimes.
I didn't find anything on Purina's site about this. Since this isn't in the news I don't know how I would hear about a response from them other than searching from time to time.
I didn't find anything on Purina's site about this. Since this isn't in the news I don't know how I would hear about a response from them other than searching from time to time.

no subject
One of my beloved cats passed away unexpectedly not long ago, with two different major veterinary centers unable to pinpoint any primary cause of his dramatic decline. Guess what he was eating?
I don't honestly give a damn how Purina does or doesn't respond to the concerns, and I couldn't care less how anecdotal the evidence is. There will not be any more Purina food in our house unless the company demonstrates a major overhaul of its processes. There's just absolutely no reason to risk it when other brands are at the same price point and haven't had any reported issues.
no subject
But I'm wondering why you think that other brands don't get similar complaints?
no subject
no subject
Right now, for me and I presume
no subject
That said, if you think Purina food was the cause, I'd encourage you (if you haven't yet) to file a report (http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/HowToReport/ucm053074.htm) with the FDA and also with the company (looks like the best direct line may be 1-800-778-7462; they also have a twitter account and I generally get good responses going public through twitter - @Purina_USA).
If there is a problem with the product, the best way for the company and regulating agency be able to take action is to have data - symptoms, food type, etc - to analyze and determine what's wrong.