Assess your cat's quality of life using the veterinary HHHHHMM scale. Evaluate hurt, hunger, hydration, hygiene, happiness, mobility, and more good than bad days.
The Quality of Life (QoL) assessment is a compassionate tool designed to help cat owners and veterinarians objectively evaluate a cat's wellbeing, especially during chronic illness, terminal disease, or advanced age. Developed from Dr. Alice Villalobos's HHHHHMM scale, this calculator evaluates seven crucial aspects: Hurt, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, and More Good Days Than Bad.
Making end-of-life decisions for a beloved cat is one of the most difficult experiences a pet owner faces. Emotional bonds can make it hard to objectively assess suffering. This structured assessment provides a framework for the conversation between owners and their veterinary team, helping ensure that decisions prioritize the cat's comfort and dignity.
Each category is scored from 0 (very poor) to 10 (optimal), with a maximum total of 70 points. Scores above 35 generally suggest acceptable quality of life, while scores below 35 indicate that the cat may be suffering and humane options should be discussed with a veterinarian.
Emotional attachment makes it difficult to objectively assess a cat's suffering. This structured scale provides a framework for honest evaluation, helps track changes over time, and facilitates meaningful conversations with your veterinary team about your cat's care. This cat quality of life calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.
Total QoL Score = Hurt + Hunger + Hydration + Hygiene + Happiness + Mobility + More Good Days. Each category scored 0-10. Maximum score: 70. Score ≥ 35: generally acceptable quality of life. Score < 35: quality of life may be compromised. The trend over time is as important as any single score.
Result: Total: 33/70 — Below threshold
This cat scores 33/70, which is below the 35-point threshold. The lowest categories are Happiness (3) and Hurt/Mobility (4 each), suggesting pain and reduced engagement with life. A veterinary consultation about palliative care or humane options is recommended.
**Hurt (Pain):** Is pain being successfully managed? Can the cat rest comfortably? Does the cat flinch, vocalize, or hide when touched? Adequate pain control is the single most important factor in quality of life. Cats with uncontrolled pain score low regardless of other categories.
**Hunger:** Is the cat eating enough to maintain weight? Is hand-feeding or appetite stimulants required? Complete food refusal for more than 48 hours is a serious concern regardless of other factors.
The "right time" for end-of-life decisions is different for every family. Many veterinarians suggest it's better to be a week early than a day late — meaning that choosing to let go while the cat still has some good moments is more compassionate than waiting until they are in obvious crisis. Quality of life assessments help you recognize when the balance tips from more good days to more bad days.
Losing a pet is genuine grief. Pet loss support hotlines, veterinary social workers, and pet bereavement counselors are available. The ASPCA Pet Loss Hotline (877-474-3310) and university veterinary school hotlines provide free counseling for grieving pet owners.
The HHHHHMM scale was developed by veterinary oncologist Dr. Alice Villalobos. It stands for Hurt, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, and More Good Days Than Bad. Each is scored 0-10, with higher scores indicating better quality of life.
There is no single score that dictates euthanasia. A total below 35/70 suggests quality of life is compromised, but this is a guide, not a verdict. The decision should involve your veterinarian, your knowledge of your cat, and consideration of trends over time.
For cats with chronic illness, weekly assessments help track trends. For cats in hospice or declining rapidly, daily assessment may be appropriate. Comparing scores over time provides clearer insight than any single evaluation.
Not necessarily. Cats sometimes purr when in pain or distress as a self-soothing mechanism. Other signs of pain include hiding, decreased grooming, changes in posture, loss of appetite, and avoiding being touched in certain areas.
Cats are evolutionarily programmed to hide weakness. Signs of hidden pain include: decreased activity, change in sleep patterns, reluctance to jump, reduced grooming, altered facial expression (squinting, ears back), and social withdrawal.
Yes, many conditions are treatable. Pain management, appetite stimulants, fluid therapy, and other interventions can significantly improve quality of life scores. The assessment helps identify which specific areas need attention.