Dog with chicken problem

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Yes, they can get coccidia (spelling??) which has similiar symptoms as parvo in puppies, most adult dogs can live with it. If you find the trick at breaking the habit let me know, 2 of my 3 dogs LOVE chicken poo and they know the leave it command but that only works when I see them going for the poo.
The next time you take the dog to the vet have a poop test done for worms & make sure they look for coccicidia!!

Actually, dogs can't get coccidia from eating chicken (or any other non-canid species) poop. Coccidia is species-specific, so the kind that infects chickens won't infect dogs, or people, or cats, or any other non-avian species. It might show up in a stool sample as a pass-through, but it won't cause illness. I work for a vet and one year we had several different dogs drop off fecal samples that tested positive for coccidia, except that they looked "weird." We sent them out to another lab with more experience doing fecals and they informed us that what we were seeing was rabbit coccidia, dogs were eating rabbit poop and the coccidia was passing through their digestive system, and that it did not require treatment.

Dogs can get some other kinds of worms from chickens, but only if the chickens have the worms themselves. Also, if your dog is on heartworm preventative many of the heartworm pills out there also get the most common species of worms that a dog would come into contact with. So you are essentially deworming your dog every month when you give them their heartworm pill. If you are concerned, have the dog's poop (and the chicken poop too if your vet will do it) checked once or twice a year and deworm them if necessary.

As for how to stop it, I agree on working harder on the leave it command. But don't expect it to work when you aren't around. Dogs are just gross. Both of mine eat chicken poop and cat poop whenever they think we're not around to see it and stop them. One of them even eats dog poop if he thinks he can get away with it (he's much better about not doing it than he used to be, but every time I start to think I've gotten him over that disgusting habit he goes and proves me wrong).

Agreed.
I don't worry about our GSDs eating chicken poo or many of the other gross things dogs do. I can stop the poo eating if I'm right there with the "leave it!" command, but if they eat some out of my sight I don't worry. They are both fully-vetted - on heartworm and flea preventive. I am much more concerned and strict about them eating from the kitty litter box or sniffing cat butts.
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They are trained to stay out of the bathroom (where the box is located) and they know kitty butt sniffing is a big no-no. Thankfully GSDs are some of the easiest dogs to train.
 
We had problems with her eating her own poop for a long time when she was a bit younger. My vet said heartworm isn't an isue here. (I'd asked cause my old schipperke was on pills when we lived in Virgina for DH duty station). I have the dogs checked for worms every 3 months for the boarding kennel. We have marsh on our prop and they hunt and eat frogs

So should I not worry to much about it other than it makes me gag? I'll keep trying on the leave it. Mom was freaking me out about sick dogs.
 
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Your vet is wrong. According to the American Heartworm Association's heartworm incidence map your area has about 1-5 cases per reporting clinic in 2007. And that's just the clinics that report it...if you live in a rural area there may not be many clinics that report. Plus, if a lot of the vets are of the same mind as yours they may simply not see a lot of heart disease because they aren't looking for it. The vet I work for used to say that lyme disease wasn't an issue in our area, but since the in house heartworm tests we use started including lyme testing we've diagnosed about 3 cases a year. Some of those dogs had been to areas where lyme disease was endemic, but many, including my own, had never been out of the area. My vet now recommends that all dogs who have increased risk of tick exposure get the lyme vaccine because clearly it is an issue in our area. Maybe in 2001 there was less than one case per reporting clinic in your area, but heartworm is present in all 50 states and spreading quickly even into areas where it previously wasn't a problem. Especially since Katrina and all the dogs that were shipped out from shelters to other shelters and foster homes all over the country after the hurricane, there are even medication resistant strains in areas where heartworm was not previously considered an issue.

But as for eating chicken poop, yeah I wouldn't worry about it except that it makes you gag. My dogs have eaten plenty of chicken poop in the last year since we got the chickens and neither of them has been sick from it. In fact, in the past year neither of my dogs have had any diarrhea. Which is odd, because they usually get a clostridial overgrowth of some kind at least once a year from eating something they shouldn't have or stress or something.
 
I agree that the vet is wrong on the heartworm risk. If you've ever had a mosquito in Washington, you have a risk of heartworm.

I've dealt with the heartbreak of the world's best dog having heartworms. It's not what ultimately led to her death, cancer did, but it was heartbreaking to watch her suffer.
 
We had the Schipperke on heartworm meds for the 12 years we were in Virginia Beach. The vet we went to there had a dog heart full of heartworms in a jar in his office to point out why dogs needed meds. But I knew there was a heartworm issue there before that. The vet here seemed really surprised when I asked about the meds after I ran out. Hmm. Thinking about that, we were at my parents house for four months before coming up here. The vet I saw there, one of only a handful in the county, said he didn't know of any cases occurring in his semi-arid desert area, but thought it might be an issue on the wet west side of the Cascades.

Sheesh! lol. Now I'm going to be worrying since we've a marsh here and the neighbor has a huge pond. Not as many mosquitoes as you'd think. The frogs and birds eat them all. But they are out there even if I've only been bit once. I should put up bat boxes in the pines out back.

Trying to keep my puppies healthy and keep finding out more stuff I should have thought about.

Thanks all
 
I think it's ok as long as you worm the chickens and the dogs at the same time. Our golden retriever does it, the jack russell doesn't.

It's hard to break because the poop is a yummy treat, so the dog is praising himself by eating it no matter what you do to try and stop him. Teaching leave it can work but you have to give him something EVEN TASTIER than the poop so obeying you becomes the better option. He will probably still do it when your not there though...
 
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We lived in Snohomish for years and years - the ONLY time my dogs went on heartworm meds was when I traveled to Michigan. Never had a problem and our vet had never prescribed for any dog living in WA, nor seen any problems in WA.
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