Dog vomit triage

Dog vomit urgency check

A single vomit can be mild, but repeated vomiting can become risky quickly. PawVerity combines a short questionnaire with an optional photo to help you choose the safest next step.

What to check with dog vomit

  • Count how many vomiting episodes happened and whether your dog can keep water down.
  • Look for blood, dark coffee-ground material, foam, food pieces, or possible foreign material.
  • Note any new food, medication, toxin exposure, low energy, or belly discomfort.

Dog vomit red flags

  • Emergency vet now if your dog is trying to vomit without bringing anything up.
  • Emergency vet now if your dog has a bloated abdomen, collapse, severe weakness, or breathing trouble.
  • Contact a vet urgently if vomiting is repeated or your dog cannot keep water down.

What PawVerity gives you

The 48-hour case keeps the initial report, the uploaded image, one follow-up check, and a final trend summary for your vet conversation.

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.