Keeping Your Pet Healthy and Happy
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Keeping Your Pet Healthy and Happy: The Foundations That Matter Most
Most serious health problems in pets do not appear out of nowhere. They build quietly through missed basics, delayed checkups, poor routine, or changes that seem small until they are not.
By Dr Duncan Houston
Quick Answer
Keeping a pet healthy and happy comes down to getting the fundamentals right again and again: nutrition, weight control, dental care, parasite prevention, regular veterinary checks, exercise, enrichment, and early attention to behaviour or health changes. The best outcomes usually come from consistency, not extremes.
As a veterinarian, the biggest difference I see between pets that thrive and pets that struggle is rarely luck. It is whether the basics were done well and done early.
Why Preventive Care Matters More Than People Think
A lot of owners wait until something is clearly wrong before acting.
That is understandable, but it is also where many preventable problems become expensive, painful, or much harder to fix.
Preventive care matters because it:
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catches disease earlier
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reduces pain and suffering
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lowers long-term cost
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improves quality of life
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helps pets stay active and comfortable for longer
Good pet care is not about reacting well. It is about preventing badly.
The Core Pillars of Pet Health
If you want the simplest version, it is this:
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good food
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healthy body weight
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dental care
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parasite prevention
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exercise and enrichment
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regular veterinary checks
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early action when something changes
Everything else builds on those foundations.
Dental Care: One of the Most Overlooked Health Issues
Bad breath is not normal. It is often one of the first warning signs of dental disease.
Common problems include:
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gingivitis
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tartar buildup
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periodontal disease
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tooth fractures
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tooth resorption in cats
Dental disease does not just affect the mouth. It can affect appetite, behaviour, and long-term health, and chronic oral inflammation can place stress on the body more broadly.
What good dental care looks like
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brushing with pet-specific toothpaste
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regular checks of the mouth at home
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professional dental assessment when needed
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dental cleaning under anaesthesia when recommended
What owners often get wrong
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assuming bad breath is normal
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waiting until the pet stops eating
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thinking dry food cleans teeth effectively
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avoiding dental work because the pet still “seems fine”
In clinic, many pets with significant dental pain still keep eating. That does not mean their mouth is healthy.
Nutrition: The Daily Decision That Shapes Everything Else
Food is one of the most powerful health tools you control every single day.
A good diet should be:
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balanced
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appropriate for species and life stage
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portion controlled
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consistent enough to monitor response
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adjusted for medical needs where necessary
For most pets, I want owners to think beyond branding and marketing and ask:
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is this complete and balanced?
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does it suit this pet’s age and lifestyle?
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is my pet maintaining healthy muscle and body condition?
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is digestion stable on it?
Dogs
Dogs generally do best on a high-quality complete diet matched to age, size, and activity.
Cats
Cats need a species-appropriate diet with strong animal protein content, and many do better with more moisture in the diet, especially for urinary and kidney health.
Water matters too
Fresh water should always be available. Hydration affects:
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kidney function
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urinary health
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digestion
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energy
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recovery from illness
A good diet supports health. A bad diet quietly creates problems.
Weight Management: One of the Biggest Health Levers You Have
Obesity is one of the most common preventable problems in pets.
It increases the risk of:
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arthritis
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diabetes
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heart strain
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reduced mobility
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poor grooming
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shorter lifespan
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lower quality of life
Signs your pet may be overweight
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ribs hard to feel
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loss of waistline
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abdominal fat pad
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reduced stamina
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difficulty grooming or jumping
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slower movement
What works
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measuring food accurately
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limiting extras and treats
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tracking body condition over time
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building daily movement into routine
What does not work
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guessing portions
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feeding for emotional reasons
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assuming begging means hunger
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waiting until mobility is affected
Most weight gain happens slowly, which is exactly why owners miss it.
Exercise: Not Just for Fitness
Exercise supports:
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muscle mass
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joint health
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behaviour
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cardiovascular fitness
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healthy body weight
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bonding with owners
But exercise should fit the pet.
Dogs
Useful exercise can include:
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structured walks
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sniff walks
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fetch in moderation
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training walks
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hiking where appropriate
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breed-appropriate play
Cats
Cats need movement too, often in shorter bursts:
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wand toys
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climbing
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food puzzles
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hunting-style games
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vertical space and perches
The mistake I see often
Owners focus only on physical exercise when the real issue is under-enrichment or poor routine.
Exercise is important, but more is not always better. Right is better.
Enrichment and Mental Health: The Missing Piece in Many Homes
A pet can be fed, housed, and medically cared for and still not be thriving.
Mental health matters.
Signs of under-enrichment include:
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destructive behaviour
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attention-seeking
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pacing
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overgrooming
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barking or vocalising
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repetitive behaviours
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frustration around food or routine
Good enrichment includes
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food puzzles
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training sessions
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scent work
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chewing opportunities for dogs
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climbing, hiding, and hunting games for cats
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novelty and controlled exploration
Boredom causes more behaviour problems than many owners realise.
Training and Socialisation: Health Care in Disguise
People often separate training from health. In reality, they overlap constantly.
Good training improves:
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safety
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stress handling
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vet visit tolerance
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grooming tolerance
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confidence
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household harmony
Good socialisation helps pets:
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cope with the world
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recover from new experiences
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avoid fear-based problems later
What works best
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reward-based training
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short, repeated sessions
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early exposure done properly
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consistent household rules
What owners often misread
Many behaviour issues are not stubbornness. They are fear, confusion, overstimulation, frustration, pain, or poor sleep.
A well-trained pet is often a less stressed pet.
Parasite Prevention: Basic, Unexciting, and Extremely Important
Parasite control protects both your pet and, in some cases, your household.
Risks include:
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fleas causing itch, allergy, and anaemia
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ticks transmitting disease
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worms affecting digestion, growth, and internal health
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heartworm causing life-threatening disease in dogs
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zoonotic risk from some parasites
The best parasite plan depends on:
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species
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location
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lifestyle
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travel
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household risk
Parasite prevention is usually far easier than parasite treatment.
Vaccinations: Protection with Context
Vaccination should never be purely generic. It should be based on the pet in front of you.
Core vaccines matter because they protect against serious disease
For dogs, this often includes protection against:
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parvovirus
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distemper
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adenovirus or hepatitis
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rabies where required
For cats, this often includes protection against:
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panleukopenia
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calicivirus
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herpesvirus
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rabies where relevant
Lifestyle vaccines may also matter
Depending on location and exposure, some pets may benefit from additional protection.
The important point is not just vaccinating. It is vaccinating appropriately.
Good preventive medicine is tailored, not automatic.
Microchipping: Small Device, Huge Importance
Collars can come off. Tags can go missing. A microchip adds permanent identification.
But a microchip only works properly if:
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it is registered
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the details are current
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the owner actually updates it after moving or changing numbers
A microchip with old details is only half a solution.
Regular Vet Checks: Where Small Problems Get Caught Early
Healthy-looking pets can still have:
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dental disease
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joint pain
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early heart issues
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subtle weight change
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skin disease
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lumps
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organ dysfunction
A general guide
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most healthy adults: at least yearly
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seniors: often every 6 months
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pets with medical conditions: as advised
These visits should not just be “vaccination visits.” They are opportunities to assess the whole animal.
The earlier something is found, the more options you usually have.
Grooming and Skin Health: More Than Looking Nice
Grooming is not just cosmetic.
It helps detect:
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lumps
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skin irritation
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parasites
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pain reactions
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ear issues
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nail problems
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matting
Basic routine care often includes
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brushing
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nail trims
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ear checks
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bathing when appropriate
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coat and skin checks
What pets tolerate best is usually what has been introduced calmly and consistently.
Senior Pets: The Rules Change with Age
Older pets often need more support, not just more sympathy.
Common changes include:
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joint stiffness
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muscle loss
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dental disease
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appetite changes
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reduced sensory function
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kidney disease
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cognitive change
Senior care often means
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more frequent vet checks
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closer weight and muscle monitoring
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adjusted diets
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softer bedding
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easier access to food, water, and litter or toileting areas
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pain assessment
Aging is not a disease, but it changes how disease appears.
Behaviour Changes: One of the Earliest Clues Something Is Wrong
A pet that suddenly changes behaviour is often telling you something.
Red flags include:
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aggression
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hiding
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vocalising more
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appetite change
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toileting accidents
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sleep change
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clinginess or withdrawal
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reduced play
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new reactivity
Sometimes the issue is behavioural. Sometimes it is medical. Very often, it is both.
In practice, behaviour change is one of the most important signs owners should not ignore.
Severity Framework: When to Monitor and When to Act
Mild
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slight appetite variation
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mild behaviour change
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subtle weight gain
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occasional digestive upset
Worth watching closely and improving routine.
Moderate
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repeated vomiting or diarrhoea
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noticeable weight change
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reduced mobility
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persistent itch
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repeated behavioural issues
Needs veterinary review.
Severe
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collapse
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difficulty breathing
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inability to urinate
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not eating
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severe pain
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major lethargy
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ongoing vomiting
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sudden neurological change
Needs urgent veterinary attention.
Patterns I See Clinically
Across species, the same themes come up repeatedly:
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obesity is underestimated
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dental disease is missed until advanced
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behaviour changes are explained away too long
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owners often wait for “obvious” illness
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good routines solve more problems than people expect
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prevention is almost always cheaper and easier than crisis care
The Most Common Mistakes Owners Make
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waiting too long to act on subtle changes
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overfeeding and underestimating weight gain
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assuming bad breath is normal
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treating behaviour problems as purely training issues
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forgetting that enrichment matters as much as exercise
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skipping routine checks because the pet “looks fine”
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changing too many things at once and losing clarity on what helped
A Practical Pet Health Checklist
If you want a strong baseline, make sure you are consistently covering:
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balanced food
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clean water
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healthy body condition
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parasite prevention
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appropriate vaccines
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dental care
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movement and enrichment
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routine veterinary checks
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early action when something changes
That is the framework that keeps most pets in the best possible shape.
FAQs
How often should I take my pet to the vet if they seem healthy?
At least yearly for most healthy adults, and often every 6 months for seniors.
Is bad breath normal in pets?
No. It usually suggests dental disease or another issue that should be checked.
How do I know if my pet is overweight?
If you struggle to feel the ribs, the waistline has disappeared, or mobility is changing, weight may be an issue.
Does my indoor cat still need enrichment?
Absolutely. Indoor cats often need more deliberate mental and physical stimulation, not less.
Are annual vaccines enough for every pet?
Not always. Vaccine schedules should be tailored to age, lifestyle, travel, and local disease risk.
How important is brushing my pet’s teeth?
Very important. It is one of the most effective ways to reduce dental disease over time.
Why is my pet suddenly behaving differently?
Behaviour changes can be caused by pain, illness, stress, anxiety, aging, or environmental change. They are worth paying attention to.
Should I worry if my senior pet is just slowing down?
Yes, in the sense that slowing down should not simply be written off as age. Pain, arthritis, dental disease, and medical problems are common in older pets.
Is exercise enough to keep my pet mentally healthy?
No. Pets also need enrichment, learning, novelty, and appropriate downtime.
What is the single most important thing I can do for my pet’s long-term health?
Get the basics right consistently: food, weight, routine care, prevention, and early action when something changes.
Final Thoughts
Healthy pets usually are not the result of one perfect product, one perfect diet, or one dramatic intervention. They are the result of good decisions repeated over time.
If you stay on top of the basics, notice small changes early, and stop waiting for problems to become obvious, you give your pet a far better chance of staying active, comfortable, and genuinely well for years to come.
If you have questions about your pet’s diet, behaviour, dental health, weight, or preventive care plan, the ASK A VET™ app can help you track concerns and get veterinary guidance before small issues turn into bigger ones.