Using Behavior Modification to Address Compulsive Licking, Chewing, and Scratching in Dogs

What to do when your dog chews, licks, or scratches excessively.

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Excessive self-licking and chewing can be caused by a medical issue (see “Canine Allergies: Most Common Causes, Best Tests, Effective Treatments,” WDJ, April 2011). It can also be a behavioral problem, a classic example of an obsessive/compulsive disorder. Either way, compulsive licking, chewing, or scratching is annoying to the dog’s human companion, and dangerous to the health of the dog when leads to skin damage and increased risk of infection.

The first step is to managing these behaviors is to bring your dog to his veterinarian for a check up. Nothing you do to address the dog’s compulsive licking, chewing, or scratching will be of much use if your dog itches as a result of environmental allergies or some other medical condition. If you treat the medical condition, the licking and chewing may stop. If not, it’s also become a behavioral issue.

Here are tips for dealing with dogs who self-lick and chew excessively.

Behavior Modification Training for Dogs Who Compulsively Lick, Chew, or Scratch

First, identify your dog’s stressors. The behavioral cause of self-licking and chewing is stress. For example, the stress from a medical condition may persist even after treatment, and the learned licking/chewing behavior may persist even after the medical stress is gone.

Many other stressors can also cause licking and chewing, especially in dogs who are genetically predisposed to compulsive oral behaviors. Large breeds such as the Doberman Pinscher, Great Dane, German Shepherd, Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever, and Irish Setter are most commonly affected.

To begin behavior modification, determine your dog’s stressors and start eliminating them. Make a list of everything you can think that is stresses your dog – even just a little bit, even if the stressors don’t seem directly related to the licking. Your list might include:

  • Thunder
  • Small children
  • Dogs on television
  • Cats
  • Riding in cars
  • Visits to the vet
  • Shock collars
  • Medical issues

There are likely many more. Most owners can identify between 10 and 20 stressors for their dogs.

Work to remove stressors from your dog’s life. There are several strategies you can use to remove stressors from your dog’s list:

Get rid of it. Throw away the shock collar – in fact, avoid using aversives as much as possible.

Treat medical conditions. alleviate chronic pain with medication, provide dental care, and address anything else that might be physically troubling your dog.

Change your dog’s opinion. Using counter-conditioning and desensitization, convince your dog that children make chicken fall from the sky. If he decides they are marvelous chicken-providers instead of scary trolls, they’re no longer stressors.

Teach a new behavior. Convince your dog that the rumble of distant thunder is the cue to run to the refrigerator for a bite of cheese. Better yet, make it the cue to run and find his rope toy for arousing game of tug. By changing his behavior (get your toy instead of running to your crate to hide) you also change his opinion (thunder makes tug happen!).

Manage it. If he’s stressed by small children and you don’t have many in your life, just keep them away from him. On the rare occasion when mini-human creatures come to visit, put your dog in a safe, locked room with a tasty stuffed Kong until the creatures are gone.

Live with it. We all live with some stress. Identify the most minimal stressors and just let them be.

Other Tools to Address Compulsive Behavior in Dogs

One good way to manage your dog’s stress is to increase his exercise. Aerobic exercise not only burns energy your dog would use to fret (and lick), but also causes the release of feel-good endorphins that help alleviate stress. Mental exercise – shaping, interactive toys – can also help.

Utilizing stress-reduction products can also help reduce the impact of stressors and the resulant compulsive behaviors. There are many good products on the market that purport to alleviate stress. Here are some I’ve had success with:

  • “Through a Dog’s Ear.”Calming classical music selected and clinically tested to reduce a dog’s heart rate, available on CD or MP3.
  • Thundershirtor Anxiety Wrap. Snugly fitting wearing apparel that holds the dog tightly, similar to swaddling.
  • Comfort Zone/Dog Appeasing Pheromone (DAP).Synthetic substance that supposedly mimics the pheromones emitted by a mother dog while she’s nursing puppies, with the biological effect of calming the puppies. Comes as a plug-in (like Glade), a spray, and a collar that is impregnated with the substance. Available in most pet supply stores.
  • If the licking and chewing is due to significant generalized anxiety, or the behavior has become a compulsive disorder, talk with a veterinary behaviorist or a vet with a special interest in behavior about anti-anxiety medication to improve your dog’s quality of life and decrease the compulsive licking and chewing.

If you don’t have access to a practitioner who is knowledgeable about behavior, your vet can do a phone consult with a veterinary behaviorist. Most offer this service at no charge to other veterinarians. Contact the American College of Veterinary Behaviorists for a referral list.

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Pat Miller, CBCC-KA, CPDT-KA
Pat Miller, CBCC-KA, CPDT-KA, grew up in a family that was blessed with lots of animal companions: dogs, cats, horses, rabbits, goats, and more, and has maintained that model ever since. She spent the first 20 years of her professional life working at the Marin Humane Society in Marin County, California, for most of that time as a humane officer and director of operations. She continually studied the art and science of dog training and behavior during that time, and in 1996, left MHS to start her own training and behavior business, Peaceable Paws. Pat has earned a number of titles from various training organizations, including Certified Behavior Consultant Canine-Knowledge Assessed (CBCC-KA) and Certified Professional Dog Trainer - Knowledge Assessed (CPDT-KA). She also founded Peaceable Paws Academies for teaching and credentialing dog training and behavior professionals, who can earn "Pat Miller Certified Trainer" certifications. She and her husband Paul and an ever-changing number of dogs, horses, and other animal companions live on their 80-acre farm in Fairplay, Maryland.