Minimising stress during a visit to the Vets
Trips to the vet are necessary to ensure your cat stays healthy. However, an unfamiliar cat carrier, a car journey, new sights, smells, and unfamiliar people can be stressful. Check out our top tips to help minimise stress and ensure a positive experience when visiting our practice.
Our top tips for minimising stress
- Use a hard plastic carrier with a removable top. This allows for safe transport and easy cleaning. In the clinic we can remove the top, allowing your pet to stay inside the familiar base and not be pulled around.
- Try to avoid: fabric carriers (unstable and hard to clean), backpack carriers (small, unsteady and exposed) and harnesses (not secure and nowhere to hide).
- Make the carrier cat friendly. Use a familiar blanket inside the carrier – some cats even like to hide under a blanket to feel safe.
Where possible have the carrier out in the house at all times. Encourage your cat to sleep in the carrier or leave treats inside and it will soon become a familiar, safe place. If it cannot be out all of the time, consider having it out for a few days prior to your appointment.
It’s not just dogs who can learn! Train your cat to be comfortable in the carrier. Encourage them on to a blanket (with treats, toys or affection). Next, place the blanket in the bottom half of the carrier. Once they have learned to sit in the base, add the lid, followed by the door. Finally, start closing the door with them settled inside. This will be useful for trips to the vets, but also for transporting them to the cattery, moving home or going on holiday!
- Hold the carrier from the base, keeping it steady.
- Cover the carrier with a blanket so your cat feels more secure and less exposed.
- Pheromone sprays such as Pet Remedy or Feliway can also help your cat relax in the carrier – make sure to spray the blanket 15 minutes before use.
- Ensure the carrier is secure in the car e.g. within the footwell behind the front seats or on the back seat with a seatbelt.
- Consider using plastic sheets below the carrier in case of soiling and take a spare blanket just in case.
After a stay in the vets or a procedure at the clinic your cat may smell and behave differently. This may cause conflict with other cats in the house. Keep your returning cat in a separate room initially with everything they need. Swap bedding between different areas of the house so that they regain their normal smell, then gradually reintroduce them to the others in a supervised way.
For some cats the experience will still be stressful, even when all of the above are carried out. If you’re concerned this will be the case for your cat, we may be able to provide medication to help. Please contact reception and talk to one of our Vets to work out the best approach for you and your cat.
