Do you smooch your pooch?
Lots of dog moms and dads do. After all, his mouth is cleaner than yours, right?
Nope.
Think about it -- what he eats, what he licks. Common sense tells you it’s a germfest.
But
the truth is, those bacteria aren’t big health risks for most people.
So kissing your furry baby is OK, if it doesn’t gross you out. Just have
a healthy awareness of what could be in your dog’s mouth, says Clark
Fobian, DVM, president of the American Veterinary Medical Association.
What has your dog been doing?
Before you kiss a
dog, or let a dog kiss your face, “you have to think of where their nose
has been,” Fobian says. “Has it been inside a dead opossum on the side
of the road, or the posterior of another dog, or in the litter box?”
Don’t
think that kissing your dog on his snout or the top of his head is
safer than on the mouth. When a dog has an infection -- say, in his ear
-- germs can end up all over his body through scratching, Fobian says.
And there’s a good chance whatever’s in his mouth will end up on his
coat through slobber and licking.
Could you make each other sick?
Human
and dog mouths have “a large number and a wide variety of bacteria,”
Fobian says. Fortunately, most of it doesn’t make us sick, but some can.
Parasites like hookworm, roundworm, and giardia can be passed from dog
to human through licking. Salmonella, too, can be passed from your dog
to you, or vice versa.
Viruses tend to affect one species or the other; you’re not going to give your dog a cold, and he won’t be giving you his cough.
If you’re sick, think twice
If
you’re not healthy, skip it. People with weak immune systems should
simply avoid kissing pets, Fobian says. That includes those with HIV/AIDS, those who have had an organ transplant, and those who are on medicines for cancer that limit the body’s ability to fight off infection.
Get the message from your dog
Some dogs may not like you to put your face close to theirs.
A dog who doesn’t want to be kissed will show his stress by leaning away, looking away, pursing and licking his lips.
“A
lot of people miss those signs, and when they try to kiss the dog, the
dog snaps at them,” says Melissa Bain, DVM, assistant professor at UC
Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.
If your dog is giving you signs that this is not her thing, then don’t put her through it, Bain says.
It’s
not much different from trying to kiss a human who doesn’t want to be
kissed. “We respect people who are like that; we should also respect
dogs who are like that,” Bain says.