Ruth Hatten
Animal Wellness Intuitive | Naturopath + Healer
Ancient healing wisdom woven into contemporary care for vibrant animal health and wellbeing.
Parasite preventatives are among the most common pharmaceutical exposures in companion animals.
Many are neurotoxic by design.
They are created to disrupt insect nervous systems — and inevitably influence mammalian physiology as well.
While sometimes beneficial in specific circumstances, routine and repeated use contributes to cumulative toxic burden over time.
For some animals, this burden is tolerated.
For others, it is not.
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Natural parasite prevention is not about avoidance.
It is about assessment, context, and terrain.
It is about understanding when intervention is necessary — and when resilience, nutrition, and environmental strategy can reduce risk instead.
The Guide to Natural Parasite Prevention
A practical, structured resource for guardians who want:
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✔ A clear understanding of common parasites
✔ Insight into how conventional parasite medications actually work
✔ An explanation of neurotoxic mechanisms
✔ Seven natural prevention strategies
✔ Immune-supportive nutrition guidance
✔ Simple, home-based prevention frameworks
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This is not a surface-level “natural alternatives” list.
It is a strategic, terrain-focused approach to prevention.
Designed to integrate into your animal’s broader wellness plan.

Upgrade to the Complete Parasite Prevention Bundle

For guardians who want deeper understanding and live clinical context.
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The bundle includes:
✔ The full Guide
✔ The 45-minute Parasite Prevention Masterclass
✔ Clinical Q&A discussion
✔ A more detailed breakdown of neurological and toxic load implications
This is the comprehensive option.
Built from clinical practice
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I’m Ruth Hatten — animal naturopath, pet nutritionist,
and energy practitioner.
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For over a decade, I’ve worked with animals experiencing chronic inflammatory patterns, neurological sensitivity, digestive instability, immune dysregulation, and toxic overload.
Repeated exposure to pharmaceutical parasite preventatives is one of the most common contributing factors I observe in clinical practice.
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This does not mean they are never appropriate.
It means they must be assessed — not assumed.
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Prevention should be contextual.
Intervention should be measured.
And physiology should be respected.
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This collection reflects lived clinical experience — not theory, and not internet trends.
Who is this for?
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This collection is for you if:
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✔ You question routine chemical protocols
✔ You want informed alternatives — not reactive avoidance
✔ Your animal has shown sensitivity to medications
✔ You understand prevention is about terrain, not just treatments
✔ You want to reduce toxic burden without compromising safety
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