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The Best Food for a Dog With Diarrhea: Pumpkin and Turkey to the Rescue

The boiled hamburger and rice bland diet you may turn to any time your pup has diarrhea isn’t actually the best thing for you to be feeding them. Why not? What should you feed a dog with diarrhea instead of rice?

Read on for more information on what to give a dog with diarrhea and how a raw food diet for dogs could help improve your pup's digestion long-term.

Understanding Dog Poop: Loose Stool Vs Diarrhea

While many people use “loose stool” and “diarrhea” interchangeably, there is actually a difference between the two terms. Symptoms of loose stools include:

  • •Shapeless stools

  • •Mushy or soft poop

  • •Watery stools

  • •Mucous or film surrounds the feces

The occasional loose stool is nothing to worry about, and loose stools aren’t classified as diarrhea unless they happen three or more times per day. If your dog’s loose stool doesn’t clear up after three days on a pumpkin and turkey bland diet, you should contact their veterinarian.

Even though diarrhea and loose stools aren’t exactly the same, we’re using the term “diarrhea” in this blog because it’s what most people are familiar with.

Recognizing Diarrhea as a Medical Emergency

Not all diarrhea requires a trip to the vet, but you need to know whether you can treat your pet’s diarrhea at home with a diet change or whether you should make an urgent vet appointment.

Call the vet if your dog has any of the following symptoms along with their diarrhea:

  • •Vomiting

  • •Diarrhea that’s bloody or looks like coffee grounds

  • •Fever

  • •Loss of appetite

  • •Rough or dull coat

  • •Acting extremely weak or tired

  • •Signs of dehydration, such as dry or pale gums and skin that doesn’t snap back into place after you pinch it

  • •Signs of abdominal pain, like groaning, bloating, not wanting to be touched, panting rapidly, or spending a lot of time in the “prayer position” with their front legs and head on the floor and butt in the air

You should also contact your vet if your dog:

  • •Is a puppy or a senior dog

  • •Isn’t fully vaccinated

  • •May have eaten something poisonous

  • •Is on a new medication

  • •Has a preexisting condition

The First Response: Fasting

The first thing to do when your dog starts having diarrhea is to withhold all food, treats, bones, and other edibles (except water) for 12-24 hours. This lets your dog’s intestines clear everything out and then rest. While withholding food, always make sure your dog still has plenty of water to prevent dehydration.

The Best Food for a Dog With Diarrhea: Pumpkin and Turkey Diet

Once you’ve given your dog’s digestive system a chance to rest, you can introduce a diet of 100% pure canned pumpkin (not pumpkin pie filling) and boiled, fat-free turkey. Mix the pumpkin and turkey in a 50/50 mixture and feed small amounts throughout the day. This is much easier on your dog’s digestive tract than trying to process a large meal all at once.

Hopefully, fasting your dog and then giving them this bland diet will clear up their diarrhea within a day or two, and you can gradually transition your dog back to their normal diet. If your pup is still having diarrhea after 48 hours, or if other symptoms show up, it’s time for a trip to the vet.

The Raw Diet Advantage: How Biology Fights Diarrhea

While fasting and introducing bland food are effective short-term treatments for diarrhea, switching to a balanced raw diet is the healthiest long-term strategy for preventing recurrence. Our raw food's composition directly addresses the root causes of chronic digestive upset that carb-heavy, processed diets often create.

Why Raw Food Is Better for the Canine Gut

The canine digestive system is fundamentally designed for raw meat, not cooked or processed starches. Dogs are facultative carnivores, meaning their bodies efficiently utilize animal protein and fat but struggle to process high volumes of carbohydrates. Kibble, which is often 30-50% carbohydrates, can overwhelm the gut and lead to inflammation and dysbiosis (an imbalance of gut bacteria).

Raw food, by contrast, is protein-dense and naturally low in carbohydrates. This aligns with your dog’s natural biology, allowing their digestive system to work optimally. Since raw food is more digestible than kibble, your dog absorbs more nutrients and produces significantly less waste (which is why raw-fed dogs have smaller stools).

The Power of Enzymes and Stomach Acidity

The lack of heat processing in a raw diet preserves live enzymes in the food. These enzymes help break down protein and fat, easing the strain on the pancreas and digestive tract. Furthermore, feeding a raw diet helps maintain the necessary high acidity of your dog's stomach (pH 1-2). This powerful acidity is the body's first defense mechanism, designed to break down bone and eliminate pathogens.

When a dog eats processed food, their stomach acid production often decreases, which slows digestion and allows pathogenic bacteria to survive and multiply, leading to episodes of diarrhea and loose stool. By feeding raw, you actively support this natural, protective acid barrier.

The Importance of Fiber: Why Pumpkin for Dogs With Diarrhea?

For years, vets have recommended rice and hamburger or chicken for dogs with diarrhea. Why switch from rice to pumpkin? It’s all about fiber. There are actually many different types of fiber, and each has a different impact on your dog’s gut.

Let’s take a closer look at the many different types of fiber and why pumpkin is a better source of fiber for dogs with diarrhea than rice.

Dietary Vs Functional Fiber

Dietary fiber naturally occurs in foods and includes cellulose, hemicellulose, beta-glucans, lignins, and resistant starches (found in legumes and green bananas).

Functional fiber is added to foods and dietary supplements and includes inulin, pectins, oligofructose, and plant gums.

Viscous Vs Non-Viscous Fiber

Fiber that gels in water, like psyllium, beta-glucans, pectins, and some gums, is classified as viscous and can lower cholesterol, slow gastric emptying time, and delay the absorption of certain nutrients (including sugars) in the small intestine.

Soluble Vs Insoluble Fiber

Soluble fiber, like gums, beta-glucans, psyllium, and most pectins, easily disperses when mixed with water. Insoluble fibers like lignin and cellulose don’t dissolve in water.

One benefit of soluble fiber is that it binds with fatty acids and slows digestion, which can stabilize a pet’s blood sugar levels.

Insoluble fiber is what you might consider “roughage” and helps bulk up stool and move waste products through the intestine, preventing constipation. Many people think all fiber has this same laxative effect, but some types of fiber (like the pectins found in bananas) actually draw water out of feces and put it back in the body, resulting in firmer stools. Adding a small amount of mashed banana to your dog’s pumpkin and turkey bland diet can help stop diarrhea.

Fermentable, Partially Fermentable, and Nonfermentable Fiber

Fermentable fiber sources like oligofructose, inulin, guar gum, beta-glucans, and pectins provide a food source for the billions of beneficial bacteria in your dog’s gut, helping the good bacteria thrive so they can assist with returning your dog’s digestive system to normal.

Generally, fruit and vegetable fibers (like what you would find in pumpkin) are fermentable and have this benefit.

Lignin, cellulose, and some other fiber sources are nonfermentable and typically come from grains (like rice).

Fiber: Pumpkin Vs Rice

100% pure canned pumpkin puree contains a whopping 7 grams of soluble fiber per cup, while cooked white rice only contains 1.2 grams of fiber per cup. Since soluble fiber slows down GI transit times and coats and soothes irritated bowels, you can start to see why pumpkin is better than rice for diarrhea.

Additionally, dogs with diarrhea are at risk for dehydration due to the loss of important electrolytes, like potassium. Pumpkin contains a whopping 505 mg of potassium per cup, giving it another leg up over rice.

Finally, grains like rice aren’t species-appropriate for carnivores like dogs and cats. Beyond that, white rice may contain concerning levels of arsenic and often passes into dogs’ stool undigested.

As you can see, canned pumpkin makes much more sense as part of a bland diet for dogs to treat diarrhea.

The Role of Fat: Why Turkey Over Beef?

While you may be more likely to have extra hamburger meat in your freezer than ground turkey, beef is much higher in fat that doesn’t necessarily boil away, and fat can worsen an upset stomach. Ground turkey is the leanest meat you can easily find, making it the optimal choice for your pup’s bland diet.

Boiling the meat is the safest cooking method to remove all the fat without the harmful advanced glycation end products that baking or broiling meat at high temperatures can produce.

Other Options for Pets With Food Intolerances or Preferences

If your dog is allergic to turkey, doesn’t like pumpkin, or has some other problem with a 50/50 pumpkin and turkey bland diet, you can substitute skinless mashed yams, sweet potatoes, or white potatoes for the pumpkin or cooked codfish, fat-free pork, or chicken breast for the turkey.

Preventing Future Episodes: The Raw Food Difference

If your dog frequently suffers from diarrhea or loose stools, it is a clear sign that their body is reacting poorly to their current food. The solution lies in a diet that eliminates the common irritants found in processed pet food.

Eliminating Common Dietary Triggers

We Feed Raw ensures that our meals contain zero unnecessary fillers, artificial ingredients, or high-glycemic carbohydrates. Kibble often relies on ingredients like corn, soy, and wheat, which are common allergens and known inflammatory triggers that can cause chronic gut irritation and diarrhea.

By switching to a simplified, limited-ingredient raw diet, you remove these common triggers, giving your dog’s digestive system a chance to heal and stabilize.

The Gut-Healing Benefit of Consistent Raw Feeding

Diarrhea is often a symptom of an inflamed gut. Consistently feeding a raw diet—even after the acute diarrhea episode has passed—promotes a healthier gut lining and a more balanced microbiome. This stabilization strengthens your dog’s defense against pathogens and reduces the likelihood of chronic digestive issues, making the occasional loose stool a temporary anomaly rather than a regular problem.

Transitioning Back to Your Dog’s Normal Food

Assuming the bland diet resolves your dog’s diarrhea within 48 hours, you should transition them slowly back to their normal diet (or start transitioning them to a new diet, like our frozen raw or freeze-dried raw recipes) 24 hours after their poop has returned to normal. Gradually add in more of their normal diet to each bland meal for a couple of days until they’re fully back on their regular food.

A bland diet is not nutritionally complete and isn’t OK for long-term use, so if your dog’s diarrhea doesn’t resolve within 48 hours (or sooner if they start to show other symptoms), then it’s time for a trip to the vet to discover and treat the cause of their diarrhea.

The Healthiest Diet for Dogs: Preventing Diarrhea

While most dogs will experience diarrhea from time to time, there are some things you can do to help reduce the likelihood or frequency of diarrhea, such as:

  • •Never give your dog spicy food or table scraps

  • •Don’t let your pet eat rocks, sticks, or cooked bones

  • •Give your dog plenty of exercise and keep them at a healthy weight

  • •Have your pet’s stool routinely checked for parasites

The single most impactful step you can take to prevent future episodes is to feed a well-balanced, species-appropriate diet. Our raw diet is nutritionally complete and balanced, so you can feed it as-is to help your dog maintain firm stools.

Conclusion: Choosing the Right Food for Your Dog's Health

Our commitment to high-quality protein, low carbohydrates, and high digestibility promotes the intestinal health needed for long-term consistency. You may also choose to add some canned pumpkin or a fermented superfood topper like Gussy’s Gut to achieve those perfect poops.

If your pup isn’t already on We Feed Raw, take the quiz now to see how much it would cost to start your dog on our species-appropriate, highly nutritious food.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What should I feed my dog if it has diarrhea?

If your dog has diarrhea, you might be tempted to turn to a bland diet of boiled hamburger and rice. However, current studies have shown that the best food for a dog with diarrhea is actually a 50/50 mix of pure canned pumpkin and boiled turkey.

Pumpkin is packed with soluble fiber and electrolytes that can help soothe the digestive tract and restore hydration, while turkey is a lean, easy-to-digest protein source.

Can I give my dog pumpkin to help with diarrhea?

Yes, pumpkin is one of the best foods you can give a dog with diarrhea. Not only does it contain high levels of soluble fiber, which can soothe the gut and slow down transit times, but it also contains a significant amount of potassium, which can help combat dehydration. Remember to only use 100% pure canned pumpkin, not pumpkin pie filling, which contains added sugars and spices.

How does a diet of pumpkin and turkey help dogs with diarrhea?

Mixing pumpkin and turkey in a 50/50 ratio provides a gentle, high-fiber diet that is much easier on a dog's digestive tract than other foods. The pumpkin helps to slow down the transit times in the gut and soothes irritated bowels, while the turkey offers lean protein that's easy to digest. This combination can help clear up your dog’s diarrhea quickly, without straining their system.

Is pumpkin a good alternative to the traditional rice-based bland diet for treating dog diarrhea?

Yes, pumpkin is a great alternative to rice for treating dog diarrhea, and it's actually more beneficial due to its high fiber content. It contains 7 grams of soluble fiber per cup compared to the 1.2 grams in cooked white rice, which can help slow down GI transit times and coat and soothe irritated bowels.

It also has a high level of potassium, which is crucial in preventing dehydration in dogs with diarrhea.

What should I do if my dog’s condition does not improve after feeding them pumpkin and turkey?

If your dog's diarrhea doesn't go away after three days on a diet of pumpkin and turkey, or if they develop additional symptoms such as vomiting, fever, or appetite loss, contact your vet. Diarrhea can be a symptom of more serious underlying conditions, and prolonged diarrhea can lead to dehydration, which can be dangerous for dogs.

Are there other options for dogs with food intolerances or preferences?

Yes, if your dog doesn't like pumpkin or is allergic to turkey, you can replace the pumpkin with mashed yams, sweet potatoes, or white potatoes, and the turkey can be replaced with cooked codfish, fat-free pork, or chicken breast.

The important thing is to maintain a 50/50 mix of fibrous, watery vegetables and lean, easy-to-digest proteins.

How can I transition my dog back to their regular diet after their diarrhea clears up?

After your dog's diarrhea has resolved, you can gradually transition them back to their regular diet by slowly adding more of it back in over a couple of days. The bland diet of pumpkin and turkey isn't nutritionally complete for long-term use, so it should be progressively replaced with the dog's balanced regular food.

How can I prevent my dog from getting diarrhea again?

There are some steps you can take to help reduce the likelihood of your dog getting diarrhea again. This includes not giving your dog spicy food or table scraps; ensuring your dog doesn't eat rocks, sticks, or cooked bones; providing consistent exercise and maintaining a healthy weight; having routine checks for parasites; and feeding a well-balanced raw diet.

Is it true that pumpkin has more benefits for dogs with diarrhea than rice?

Yes, pumpkin is a better source of fiber for dogs with diarrhea than rice. With 7 grams of soluble fiber per cup, pumpkin can help slow gastrointestinal transit times and coat irritated bowels. Plus, pumpkin contains more potassium than rice, which is important for maintaining hydration in dogs with diarrhea.

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