1. Keep your senior pet's costume simple
2. Leave your senior pet at home
3. Create a quiet area for your nervous senior pet
Whether you stay home with your pet to hand out candy or leave them home alone, the holiday's chaos may cause them anxiety. You may find the constant barrage of trick-or-treaters amusing, but your senior dog may become hoarse from barking, or your scared senior cat will hide under the furthest corner of your bed. Head off your pet's nervous reaction by setting up a quiet, stress-free area in a quiet back room where they can ride out Beggar's Night in peace. Move your pet's favorite bed and toys to the room, and keep them distracted from all the noise and activity with a frozen peanut butter-slathered LickiMat, or a Kong filled with canned food. Instead of allowing visitors to ring your doorbell, meet them at the door or sit outside to hand out candy.
4. Prevent your senior pet from indulging their sweet tooth
Sneaking into the Halloween candy bowl can cause your senior pet a host of problems, including:
- Toxicity — Chocolate ingestion can cause toxicity signs that range from mild gastrointestinal (GI) upset to life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias. Dark chocolate is most dangerous, but milk chocolate can also cause problems if your pet ingests a toxic dose. Other toxic ingredients, such as raisins and xylitol, may also be lurking in your candy bowl.
- Pancreatitis — Chocolate and nut-filled candy bars contain more fat than your pet is used to eating and may lead to pancreatic inflammation. Pancreatitis can become life-threatening, especially in older, debilitated pets who are affected by other health conditions.
- GI upset — Your senior pet's GI tract may have become more sensitive, and indulging in sweets may lead to vomiting and diarrhea.
- Intestinal obstruction — If your pet ingests candy wrappers, lollipop sticks, or other non-food material in their haste to swallow treats before they are caught, the foreign material may lodge in their GI tract and cause life-threatening obstruction.
Keep all candy safely stored out of your pet's reach. Ensure your kids' post-Halloween candy stash does not end up in their bedrooms, where your pet may easily find and happily devour it.