Every pet owner knows that having a pet comes with an enormous amount of responsibility. The most common responsibility, as their owner, is feeding them and providing them with enough exercise to keep them physically healthy. On the other hand, an owner must also provide them with genuine love and protection from other animals, humans and cars. Owners may also have to protect other animals and humans from your own pet, if it is aggressive. Generally, all these responsibilities are met but there is another responsibility that not all owners think about when getting a new pet. This responsibility is a simple and cheap one called neutering or spaying, or commonly called getting them “fixed”. This simple and effective surgery can have many beneficial …show more content…
If an owner does not carefully monitor their pet, it could escape and potentially get pregnant or get another dog pregnant. Cats and dogs, both when impregnated, have multiple offspring in a single litter. This leads to unwanted pets; these unwanted pets end up either on the streets or in dog pounds. “Approximately 5 million to 7 million companion animals enter animal shelters nationwide every year.” (Bissell Foundation). That is just a small amount when comparing to the amount that live on the streets. According to the Bissell Foundation, it is nearly impossible to estimate the amount of homeless cats and dogs that live in the United States; estimates for cats alone range up to 70 million. All of these poor abandoned animals suffer from negligence, solely because they are unwanted. Fixing your pet can be the most simply solution to help lower the amount of abandoned pets living in shelters and on the …show more content…
Animals, just like humans, are prone to all sorts of disease; anything ranging from a common cold to life threatening cancer. An animal that has been spayed or neutered has a significantly lower chance of getting life threatening diseases. According to The Humane Society of the United States, neutered male dogs live 18% longer than un-neutered male dogs and spayed female dogs live 23% longer than un-spayed female dogs. This increase in the longevity of a pets life has to do with the fact that getting them fixed decreases the chance of them contracting