Why vets recommend Royal Canin, Science Diet, Purina #dogfood

The good news? šŸ‘‡

If you’re not 100% comfortable with your vet’s recommendation, you can ask questions *and* get a second vet opinionšŸ‘‡

JUST LIKE, if you don’t like my content, you can unfollow 🫶

TO SUMMARIZE my thoughts:

Based on what vets have told me over the past decade of interviewing them, i believe the main reasons many (not all) vets recommend brands with questionable ingredients (like RC, Purina or Hills etc) BECAUSE:

āœ”ļø It’s what they learned in school
āœ”ļø Many are more focused on managing the disease/outcomes & not as focused on ingredients
āœ”ļø The big brands like Royal Canin, owned by Mars candy company, have research on their food- vets are trained to follow science. Just note potential limitations (short length, bias, etc) on studies & understand that other brands are coming out with studies too… just takes longer without funding by massive corporations… I cant WAIT to have this conversation in 5-10 years šŸ˜
āœ”ļø Some care more more about ā€œnutrientsā€ than ā€œingredientsā€- meaning, as long as the protein % meets the minimum requirements, then it doesn’t matter if the protein comes from corn or peas – instead of meat
āœ”ļø The prescription lines have shown to help dogs in some cases, for the short term (example dogs with pancreatitis or kidney issues). Which is why I always say I’m not against prescription lines – but for MY dogs – if nothing else worked & I *had* to use a prescription line, I’d only work with a vet who helped me use it for *limited* time while finding solutions with better ingredients.

Net: why can’t it be both? Why does it have to be ā€œORā€ ? For my pets, it’s always ā€œANDā€

Your dog deserves the right nutrients AND real, whole food ingredients. Period šŸ’Æ

With all the science & research in these big brands, WHY can’t they make foods that meet nutrient needs WITH (primarily) Whole Foods?

Science says we can, so why don’t they? THIS IS MY MAIN ISSUE… the foods (eg Purina/RC) are $$$$$$ *and* often made with lots of corn, rice, soy, peas, wheats etc

All this to say, I share my content to help YOH make informed decisions with your vet AND to push brands to do better šŸ¤

5 Comments

  1. @RachelFusaro on July 16, 2025 at 10:29 pm

    The good news? šŸ‘‡

    If you’re not 100% comfortable with your vet’s recommendation, you can ask questions *and* get a second vet opinionšŸ‘‡

    JUST LIKE, if you don’t like my content, you can unfollow 🫶

    TO SUMMARIZE my thoughts:

    Based on what vets have told me over the past decade of interviewing them, i believe the main reasons many (not all) vets recommend brands with questionable ingredients (like RC, Purina or Hills etc) BECAUSE:

    āœ”ļø It’s what they learned in school
    āœ”ļø Many are more focused on managing the disease/outcomes & not as focused on ingredients
    āœ”ļø The big brands like Royal Canin, owned by Mars candy company, have research on their food- vets are trained to follow science. Just note potential limitations (short length, bias, etc) on studies & understand that other brands are coming out with studies too… just takes longer without funding by massive corporations… I cant WAIT to have this conversation in 5-10 years šŸ˜
    āœ”ļø Some care more more about ā€œnutrientsā€ than ā€œingredientsā€- meaning, as long as the protein % meets the minimum requirements, then it doesn’t matter if the protein comes from corn or peas – instead of meat
    āœ”ļø The prescription lines have shown to help dogs in some cases, for the short term (example dogs with pancreatitis or kidney issues). Which is why I always say I’m not against prescription lines – but for MY dogs – if nothing else worked & I *had* to use a prescription line, I’d only work with a vet who helped me use it for *limited* time while finding solutions with better ingredients.

    Net: why can’t it be both? Why does it have to be ā€œORā€ ? For my pets, it’s always ā€œANDā€

    Your dog deserves the right nutrients AND real, whole food ingredients. Period šŸ’Æ

    With all the science & research in these big brands, WHY can’t they make foods that meet nutrient needs WITH (primarily) Whole Foods?

    Science says we can, so why don’t they? THIS IS MY MAIN ISSUE… the foods (eg Purina/RC) are $$$$$$ *and* often made with lots of corn, rice, soy, peas, wheats etc

    All this to say, I share my content to help YOH make informed decisions with your vet AND to push brands to do better šŸ¤

  2. @RoaminRomeros on April 12, 2026 at 3:45 pm

    Hey Rachel, love the Channel and grateful I stumbled across it! My parents have a toy fox terrier that’s about 10lbs. Not overweight by a lot but he’s a couch potato so he just chills all day while the other dogs like walks and toys. I’ve been trying to help him lose a little weight and stop him from eating his own poop with different national toppers and such but nothing seems to work. Can you recommend some food to make sure he feels full but also help with weight? Vet said he’s fine but compared to his brothers (who live in a different house) he is a tad overweight. Any recommendations on food or anything I would love to know. Thank you!

  3. @yyybra on April 14, 2026 at 3:59 pm

    U funeeešŸ˜

  4. @RobertGallo-c4c on April 17, 2026 at 6:47 pm

    You are a unqualified, bought and paid for Shill. Your misinformation is Not factual , completely bias and lacks efficacy. Your approach of not looking at the dry matter analysis is a clear indicator of your lack of understanding on nutrition fundamentals. It’s sad you represent groups peddling snake oil with zero efficacy who are only able to scam millions selling their unregulated and undocumented products. They exist in the shadows protected by supplement disclaimers which clearly list their products Re Not FDA approved , and Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Very Sad the way you peddle misinformation for your handler’s like a brainwashed drone.

  5. @misstracey301 on April 17, 2026 at 11:17 pm

    Rachel those ā€œlarger massive brandsā€ do more than ā€œsomeā€ research. They actually do the most research and have for decades. Also you talk about the complete analysis yet you never discuss phosphorus levels, calcium, fibre, essential vitamins etc. I listened to people like you for years until I finally opened my eyes to the fact that I was being played by influencers who actually are getting paid significantly, not veterinarians, to promote boutique food with little to no real research and unbalanced nutrition to suckers like I was. I’m ashamed of myself for how easily I fell into all of that misinformation. For the record, I do think you care very much however I do not think you have the qualifications to make the claims you do.

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