Cat poop triage

Cat poop change check

Cat stool changes can be hard to judge because litter hides details and cats often mask illness. PawVerity helps you structure the observation and capture the red flags that matter.

What to check in the litter tray

  • Check the litter tray for stool colour, mucus, blood signs, and how often your cat is passing stool.
  • Note appetite, drinking, hiding, energy, and whether the change has lasted more than 24 hours.
  • For cats, also watch whether they are urinating normally or repeatedly visiting the tray.

Cat-specific red flags

  • Emergency vet now if your cat cannot urinate, strains repeatedly, or cries in the litter tray.
  • Emergency vet now for collapse, severe lethargy, pale gums, or suspected toxin exposure.
  • Call a vet today for repeated diarrhea, visible blood, or a cat that is not eating.

What PawVerity gives you

The paid 48-hour case gives you a clinic-ready report with the uploaded image, owner answers, AI visual notes, one follow-up, and a final trend summary.

PawVerity is not a diagnosis and does not replace a physical veterinary examination. It is a structured triage and evidence tool for Australian pet owners.