Designed for support. Not replacement.
VetCaseIQ is built to help veterinary professionals organize and review complex cases. It is a support tool — not a diagnostic device, and not a substitute for the attending veterinarian.
What VetCaseIQ is
- A tool for organizing case information into a structured report
- A support for clinical review, handoffs, and second-opinion preparation
- A consistent format for complex, chronic, and multi-visit cases
- Built around veterinary professional review at every step
What VetCaseIQ is not
- A diagnostic tool or a source of final diagnoses
- A source of treatment decisions or prescriptions
- A replacement for examination, diagnostics, or clinician judgment
- An emergency triage tool for pet owners
- A way to establish a veterinarian-client-patient relationship
Human oversight is required
Every VetCaseIQ report is meant to be reviewed, edited, and interpreted by a licensed veterinarian. The veterinarian remains solely responsible for all clinical decisions. Reports organize information; they do not decide anything.
Reports require veterinary interpretation
Output is a starting point for professional review, not a conclusion. It should always be read alongside the original records.
No final diagnosis
VetCaseIQ presents considerations for review, never a definitive diagnosis.
No treatment decisions
VetCaseIQ does not prescribe, dose, or recommend specific treatments.
Not for owner self-triage
It is not designed for pet owners to make decisions about their pet's care.
Limitations of AI-assisted organization
It may miss details
Important information can be overlooked, especially when input is incomplete or inconsistent.
It may misinterpret incomplete information
Gaps in the provided data can lead to organization that needs correction.
Output depends on input quality
The more complete and accurate the case details, the more useful the structured report.
It should be checked against original records
Always verify findings against the source documents and current standards of care.
How clinics should use VetCaseIQ
Use de-identified data when possible
Remove client names, contact details, and payment information before entering a case.
Review source documents
Keep the original records on hand while reviewing the structured report.
Validate extracted findings
Confirm that values, notes, and history were captured correctly.
Edit the report before use
Correct, add, or remove anything before the report informs any discussion.
Use professional judgment
The veterinarian interprets the case and makes every clinical decision.
See our data handling guidance → · Read the Terms & Clinical Disclaimer →
See the safeguards in action
Review a fictional example report, or request pilot access for your clinic.