If you've ever stood in front of your vet trying to remember whether your dog seemed "a little off" last Tuesday or the Tuesday before, you already know the problem. Managing a chronic illness in a pet is mostly an information problem. The medication is usually the easy part. Remembering, noticing, and reporting are where most of us quietly fail.
I've spent a lot of time on this lately (more on why at the end), and I want to share a system that's simple enough to actually keep up with. No app required to start — pen and paper works. But a few small structure choices make the difference between notes you abandon in week two and a log your vet actually thanks you for.
Why writing it down matters more than you think
Three concrete things happen when you track consistently:
1. You stop missing doses. This sounds obvious, but with twice-daily insulin or a seizure medication that has to be given on a strict schedule, a single forgotten dose can matter. A checkbox you tick is far more reliable than "I'm pretty sure I gave it."
2. Your vet gets real data instead of vibes. Vets make decisions from what you tell them. "He's been drinking more water" is useful. "Water bowl refilled 3x/day this week vs 1x/day last month" is something they can act on. Appointments are short — a log does the remembering for you.
3. You catch patterns you'd never notice in the moment. Flare-ups, appetite dips, and behavior changes are easy to miss day to day and obvious in a log. A pattern over two weeks can be the thing that surfaces in a 15-minute appointment.
None of this replaces your vet. It just makes the time you do get with them far more productive.
Five principles for a log that sticks
After a lot of trial and error, these are the ones that actually held up:
Track the fewest things possible. Pick the 2–4 measures that matter for your pet's specific condition. A log you can fill out in 20 seconds gets filled out. A 15-field form gets abandoned.
Make it timestamped and chronological. Date and time on every entry. When a problem shows up, the sequence is often what reveals the cause.
Log doses at the moment you give them, not later. "I'll write it down tonight" is how double-doses and missed doses happen. Tie it to the action.
Note the boring days too. A week of "normal, normal, normal" is data. It's the baseline that makes the abnormal day stand out.
Keep it somewhere you can hand to the vet. A shared note, an export, a printout — whatever survives the trip to the clinic. A log nobody can read isn't a log.
Condition-specific tips (and a free tracker for each)
Every chronic condition has its own handful of things worth watching. Quick notes below, plus a free single-purpose tracker I built for each — no signup, no cost.
Diabetic dogs: log every insulin dose with the time, plus appetite and any signs of a low (wobbliness, lethargy). Consistency of timing matters as much as the dose. There's a simple free tracker for this here.
Cats with CRF / kidney disease: subcutaneous fluid therapy is easy to lose track of. Note the time, amount, and how the cat tolerated it, alongside appetite and water intake. A free fluid-therapy tracker is here.
Dogs with epilepsy: record each seizure (time, duration, what it looked like) and every dose of medication. Seizure clusters and timing relative to doses are exactly what a neurologist wants. A free seizure-and-medication tracker is here.
Cats with asthma: flare-ups are easy to under-report. Note coughing episodes, breathing effort, and inhaler/medication use, plus any possible triggers (dust, new litter, season). A free flare tracker is here.
Post-surgery recovery (dogs): the first two weeks are when small problems become big ones. Track the incision, pain-med doses, appetite, and activity level day by day. A free post-surgery recovery tracker is here.
Senior dogs on multiple medications: polypharmacy is its own challenge — several pills, different schedules, easy to mix up. A simple medication schedule you can check off helps. There's a free senior-dog medication tracker here.
Use whichever format you like — these are just the structure I landed on after finding generic spreadsheets too fiddly to keep up with.
The honest part
Disclosure: I build PetHealthLog, the free trackers linked above. They're genuinely free and don't require an account — I'm sharing them because the structure is the actual value, and I'd rather you have something that works than nothing. If a notebook works better for you, use the notebook. The principles above matter more than the tool.
Important: I'm not a veterinarian, and none of this is medical advice. A tracker can help you observe and report, but it can't diagnose, treat, or tell you whether something is an emergency. If your pet shows new or worsening symptoms, contact your vet or an emergency clinic. Never start, stop, or change a medication or dose without your vet's guidance. The goal of any log is to make you a better partner to the professional actually treating your animal — not to replace them.
If you've managed a chronic condition in your own pet, I'd love to hear what you ended up tracking and what you dropped. The "track fewer things" lesson took me embarrassingly long to learn.
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