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Client Communication

Client-Ready Discharge Instructions in Minutes

Transform clinical notes into clear instructions pet owners understand. Medication schedules, warning signs, and follow-up care ready to print.

No account required to try. Full editing control.

See What VetGeni Generates

Discharge summary from a diet change vomiting case

Example Output

Generated in 12 seconds

Presenting Complaint

Honey, a 3-year-old spayed female Labradoodle, was evaluated for vomiting that began two days ago after an abrupt change from Purina Pro Plan chicken to a raw food diet. No prior similar episodes or home treatments were reported.

Diagnosis

Dietary indiscretion/acute dietary change causing GI upset with vomiting. Timing after the diet switch strongly supports this diagnosis.

Visit Summary

Mild lethargy but stable, with no abdominal pain or significant dehydration. CBC and chemistry were normal aside from mild hypernatremia (sodium 166 mEq/L). Treated with SQ LRS fluids and injectable Cerenia, then sent home with Purvival and diet transition guidance. Recheck recommended if vomiting recurs, diarrhea develops, or appetite/activity do not improve within 24-48 hours.

Medications

Proviable: 1 capsule by mouth every 24 hours for GI support. Mild digestive upset may occur; contact your veterinarian if unusual symptoms appear.

Home Care Instructions

- Feed a bland diet for 3-5 days (boiled chicken and white rice, 2:1), in small frequent meals. - After 48 hours without vomiting, transition back to the regular diet over 5-7 days. - Ensure fresh water is available; avoid large volumes immediately after vomiting. - Give Purvival as directed; monitor for vomiting, diarrhea, poor appetite, or lethargy. - Promptly clean vomit; raw diet exposure can carry bacteria.

When to Seek Emergency Care

- Persistent or severe vomiting (more than 2-3 episodes in 24 hours). - Vomiting blood or dark, tarry stools. - Profound weakness, collapse, or marked lethargy. - Severe abdominal pain, distended abdomen, or hunched posture. - Refusal to eat or drink for over 24 hours. - Signs of dehydration (dry gums, sunken eyes, skin tenting).

How It Works

Three steps to better documentation

1

Input Case Details

Enter patient info, diagnosis, medications, and care instructions.

2

AI Writes It Clearly

VetGeni transforms clinical language into plain terms owners can follow.

3

Print or Send

Review, edit if needed, then print or email directly to the client.

Clear Communication, Happy Clients

Plain Language

Medical terms translated for pet owners.

Medication Schedules

Clear dosing with timing and duration.

Warning Signs

When to call, formatted to stand out.

Printable Format

Clean layout ready for handout.

Species Specific

Appropriate language for dogs, cats, and more.

Editable Templates

Customize to match your clinic style.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I customize the format?

Yes. Edit any section, add your clinic logo, and save templates for common procedures.

Can I generate from a SOAP note?

Yes. VetGeni can pull information from your SOAP note and format it into client-friendly instructions.

What languages are supported?

Currently English, with Spanish coming soon.

Can I email instructions to clients?

Yes. Export as PDF or copy text to send via your clinic email or messaging system.

Stop Rewriting the Same Instructions

Generate client-ready discharge summaries in seconds. Try free - no account needed.