Do You Kiss Your Dog on the Lips?
Flossie Posse,
Do you kiss your dogs on the lips? I do, I'll admit it. Well, I kiss them on their noses, really, but their noses are pretty close to their lips. I'm not sure why I do this, given the fact that I know what they do with their mouths. There is not a week that goes by when Nyla, the younger of my two Jack Russell Terriers, brings me something dead. Sometimes I think it was dead when she found it and sometimes I know it wasn't. Regardless, she does not discriminate and is very proud of her treasures. The old man Jack Russell, Puck, mostly gets in trash and finds bones and other bacteria infested morsels. Either way, logic tells me the old saying that a dog's mouth is cleaner than a human mouth can not be true. So I did a little research.
What I did find is that most infections carried by dogs are not transmissible to humans and vice versa. The infections such as staph and strep that they might carry are species specific.
According to ABC news, the bites inflicted by humans on humans are more likely to become infected than bites inflicted by dogs on humans. I was relieved I could not find any research regarding human bites and their affect on dogs. I am sure that news would be bad all the way around.
But is a dog's mouth cleaner based on bacteria counts etcetera? The short answer is no. After all, a dog's tongue is not only used for eating and drinking, but also as a washcloth and toilet paper.
I will probably continue to kiss my dogs. Since I work in a dental office, I am certain that my dogs have cleaner mouths than most dogs. I do brush their teeth with special peanut butter flavored toothpaste. I just try not to think too much about the details.
How could you not kiss this face?
Smooch!
Kristine