Send us a text
Ever wondered what’s actually inside a “homemade” dog diet—and whether it truly keeps dogs healthy? We sat down with researchers Drs. Janice O'Brien and Audrey Ruple from the Dog Aging Project to pull back the curtain on what owners are really feeding, what the data reveals, and how to make home-prepared meals complete and balanced without guesswork. The conversation starts with a major survey upgrade: moving from simple checkboxes to detailed free-text responses that capture real ingredients, supplements, and routines. That shift exposes a surprising truth—most DIY bowls contain nine to ten ingredients, far beyond chicken and rice, yet many still miss key nutrients for maintenance.
We walk through the practical and the personal: how to take a smarter diet history in the exam room, what owners should ask before they shop, and which tools can reliably build balanced recipes. Instead of fear or food wars, we focus on action. Consulting a board-certified veterinary nutritionist, using validated recipe platforms, and leveraging commercial base mixes can transform care and confidence. We also explore the long game. Do incomplete diets quietly shape future health risks? Which deficiencies matter most over time? Longitudinal data from the Dog Aging Project aims to turn those open questions into guidance that protects joints, skin, metabolism, and longevity.
There’s another layer that deserves attention: diversity among human owners. While our canine cohorts are broad, our human samples often aren’t. Culture, income, education, and access influence feeding choices, shopping habits, and follow-up care. Broadening who participates in pet nutrition research makes our recommendations more realistic and more fair. By the end, you’ll have a clearer view of where homemade feeding succeeds, where it stumbles, and how to build a plan that meets your dog’s needs today and supports health tomorrow.
If this conversation helped you think differently about dog nutrition, subscribe, share with a friend who home cooks, and leave a quick review—your feedback helps more pet owners find science they can use.
AJVR article: https://doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.25.06.0216
INTERESTED IN SUBMITTING YOUR MANUSCRIPT TO JAVMA ®  OR AJVR ® ?
 JAVMA ® : https://avma.org/JAVMAAuthors
 AJVR ® : https://avma.org/AJVRAuthors
FOLLOW US:
JAVMA ® :
 Facebook: Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association - JAVMA | Facebook
 Instagram: JAVMA (@avma_javma) • Instagram photos and videos
 Twitter: JAVMA (@AVMAJAVMA) / Twitter
  AJVR ® : 
 Facebook: American Journal of Veterinary Research - AJVR | Facebook
 Instagram: AJVR (@ajvroa) • Instagram photos and videos
 Twitter: AJVR (@AJVROA) / Twitter
 JAVMA ® and AJVR ® LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/avma-journals