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Perils pets face at home
Mint New Delhi
|January 03, 2026
Anything from incense to floor cleaner can pose a threat. Here's how to create a safe space for your pet
It is easy to believe that a pet living in an apartment is protected from most dangers—no cars zooming past, no street dogs picking fights, and no monsoon puddles carrying infections. Yet the most serious risks to pets often sit quietly inside our homes.
Indoor air quality is a major culprit. We light incense during prayers, burn mosquito coils, and run diffusers because they smell pleasant. Dogs and cats breathe in the same particulate matter that irritates human airways, but they do it at the floor level where heavier particles settle. Cats groom themselves meticulously, so whatever lands on their coat ends up in their stomach. I have seen healthy pets develop chronic coughing or recurrent vomiting that improves simply by moving incense to the balcony and switching from coils to sealed mosquito machines placed out of reach. A practical rule is to keep all smoke or vapour sources away from the room your pet sleeps in and ensure good ventilation. Similarly, take precautions during pest control so that the pet does not inhale or walk through the residues left behind.
This story is from the January 03, 2026 edition of Mint New Delhi.
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