Treating Pets with Compulsive Behavior Problemsby Aimee Amodio | More from this Blogger 25 Mar 2009 08:12 AM Before you can treat a compulsive behavior in your pet, you should try to figure out what's causing it. The source of the behavior may be medical, environmental, genetic, or emotional. You may need to work with your veterinarian and/or a behavioral specialist before you can figure out the cause. Once you know the cause, you can work on reducing the compulsive behavior. Anti-anxiety medications won't solve the problem, but they can help. Medicating your pet can help reduce the intensity of a behavior while you work on behavior modification and/or environmental changes. Yes, pets can take Prozac -- and it can help relieve compulsive behavior. But the change won't necessarily be quick. It can take several months for medication to make a significant change in your pet's behavior. Environmental changes -- blocking access to the thing that triggers compulsive behavior or the target of the compulsive behavior -- are important to your pet's recovery. If shadows or light trigger a chasing behavior, you may want to cover your windows carefully. Don't encourage light chasing by playing with laser pointers or flashlights. If your cat is a compulsive wool sucker, you may need to restrict or eliminate access to the things she likes to nurse on. Behavior modification is the other part of the treatment -- and it may be behavior modification for both humans and pets.
Keep things positive -- punishment generally doesn't work and can even exacerbate compulsive behaviors. Please try not to yell at your pet, no matter how annoying the repetitive behavior is. Be gentle and patient and you'll hopefully find your compulsive pet relaxing again. Learn more about Aimee Amodio ![]() Aimee is a fiction writer... dog lover... music lover... Relevantpets tags User Comments No comments on this article yet. Be the first to comment! Discuss this article
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