I agree there needs to be
some attention on weight gain.
As an owner you need to pay
attention on the weight gain and the food intake, avoid starches, sugars, or corn in the daily food of your dog.
Not exact matches
Not until critics began drawing
attention to repeated problems with infant
weight gain and loss in maternal milk supply around the 4 month mark did contact moms begin to question moms
on whether milk supply was adequate when mid-nap waking was a problem.
Between Otto's tongue tie (which, once fixed, was no longer an issue) and chronic under - supply
on my part, I had to pay pretty close
attention to his
weight gain at the outset.
Blamed for everything from headaches, to abnormal
weight loss /
gain, to constipation / diarrhea, to menstrual irregularity, to leaky gut / bowel inflammation, to anemia... and basically everything including cancer and the deaths of kittens (ok, maybe not), gluten has really gotten a bad rap in the past several years, probably very much in part due to the publishing of the book Wheat Belly by Dr. William Davis, the landmark study
on Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity (NCGS) by Dr. Peter Gibson, and the explosion of social media in the past decade that has given an unprecedented voice to people who otherwise would have no credibility with which to garner
attention towards themselves.
It also doesn't help that as a society we spend billions
on products, advertising and messaging to promote the latest type of diet, fad, program, trend, etc., each one a competing priority
on our time,
attention and mental energy as we try to focus
on what will help us achieve our fitness goals — more times than not, simple measures like «lose
weight», «
gain muscle», or «reduce blood pressure.»
Kittens who do not
gain weight at an appropriate rate should receive extra
attention with special focus
on feeding.
How Max is perceived is not heavily
weighted on the fact that she is a female nor is it based
on her being a sexualized object to
gain attention.