After GLP-1s Went Mainstream for Humans, Obese Pets Are Next

scout5

GLP-1 Novice
(🚫No Source Discussion)
Member Since
Sep 19, 2025
Posts
14
Likes Received
25
Location
bkk
United-States
 
Considering most obese pets are a product of your poor nutrition on the part of their owners, I don't know why anyone would want to give their pets GLP-1. People I understand as we can get reach into the fridge or buy absolute junk and stuff our faces, but unless pets have somehow gained the ability to apply for and get credit cards, I don't see the point. Even the article states in a roundabout way that obese cats are a product of their owners.
 
Considering most obese pets are a product of your poor nutrition on the part of their owners, I don't know why anyone would want to give their pets GLP-1. People I understand as we can get reach into the fridge or buy absolute junk and stuff our faces, but unless pets have somehow gained the ability to apply for and get credit cards, I don't see the point. Even the article states in a roundabout way that obese cats are a product of their owners.
That's a good point, although this is an interesting topic to consider.

A lot of discussion on human obesity tries to handwave it away by blaming it on people being more sedentary or bad at math (e.g. calorie counting). A little harder to claim that housecats have gotten lazier in the last 30 years (vs investigating how the nature of cat food has changed in that time).
 
If an owner doesn’t care enough to keep their pets from becoming obese, I sure as hell wouldn’t expect them to care enough to spend the money on any GLP-1.
 
Obese pets should not even be a thing. Measure the food and adjust as needed, and stop using dry kibble. For the last ten years we have been feeding our dogs meat, eggs, and organs. It doesn't need to be fancy or expensive. They smell clean, no skin issues, hair looks great with no sebum build-up, fewer issues that require vet visits, and their weight is always on point. Getting rid of the Doritos-doggy smell alone is worth its weight in gold.
 
Obese pets should not even be a thing. Measure the food and adjust as needed, and stop using dry kibble. For the last ten years we have been feeding our dogs meat, eggs, and organs. It doesn't need to be fancy or expensive. They smell clean, no skin issues, hair looks great with no sebum build-up, fewer issues that require vet visits, and their weight is always on point. Getting rid of the Doritos-doggy smell alone is worth its weight in gold.
I agree, I do the barf diet for mine
 
Back
Top Bottom