Why Structured Quality-of-Life Scoring Matters
Some of the hardest decisions a dog owner ever faces are end-of-life decisions. Pain, mobility loss, declining appetite, and incontinence can shift gradually — owners adapt, the dog adapts, and the slow erosion of quality of life becomes hard to see clearly from inside the household.
Structured scoring helps. A weekly, multi-domain assessment captures trend rather than relying on the bad-day-good-day memory that all owners struggle with. It identifies which domains are most modifiable — and many quality-of-life problems are more treatable than owners realise. And it provides a shared vocabulary for the conversation with your vet about whether interventions are still working, whether to escalate care, or whether to begin a hospice plan.
This calculator implements the seven-domain construct introduced by Dr Alice Villalobos (commonly called HHHHHMM) — the most widely-cited canine quality-of-life framework in veterinary palliative care. It is used by veterinary hospice services worldwide. We implement the seven-domain construct here with our own wording, while crediting the underlying scientific contribution.
The Seven Domains
| Domain | What it captures | 0 (worst) | 10 (best) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pain | Adequacy of pain control | Constant evident pain | Pain-free |
| Hunger | Appetite and food intake | Will not eat, weight loss | Normal appetite |
| Hydration | Drinking and hydration status | Will not drink, clinically dehydrated | Drinks normally |
| Hygiene | Cleanliness, ability to self-groom | Soiled, cannot self-clean | Clean, normal grooming |
| Happiness | Joy, engagement, interaction | Withdrawn, no joy | Engaged, joyful, interactive |
| Mobility | Ability to move | Cannot rise unassisted | Moves normally |
| More Good Days Than Bad | Overall pattern | Mostly bad days | Mostly good days |
Score each domain over the past 3-7 days, not just today. A single bad day does not change the overall picture; a steady run of bad days does.
Score Tiers
Total scores range from 0 to 70, and the calculator places the result in one of four tiers:
| Total | Tier | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 55-70 | Comfortable | Continue current care; re-score weekly |
| 40-54 | Acceptable – Watch | Focus on lowest-scoring domains; re-score every 3-4 days |
| 30-39 | Declining | Active vet conversation; many domains are still modifiable; re-score every 2-3 days |
| <30 | Poor – Hospice Conversation | Open conversation with vet; consider hospice or end-of-life care |
The tier alone does not make the decision. “Score <30 = euthanise today” would be both wrong and unkind. What the score does is highlight that the conversation should be active and ongoing — and it identifies the specific domains that can still be improved.
The Modifiable Domains
Most quality-of-life problems in dogs are more modifiable than owners initially realise. The calculator generates specific guidance for each low-scoring domain:
Pain
Modern canine pain management is genuinely effective. A layered approach combining:
- NSAIDs (carprofen, meloxicam, Galliprant for COX-2-selective)
- Gabapentin or pregabalin for neuropathic pain
- Anti-NGF monoclonal antibody (Librela / bedinvetmab) — a once-monthly injection that has transformed older-dog arthritis care
- Adjunct opioids for breakthrough pain
- Local therapy — cold packs, gentle heat, physiotherapy
The Canine Brief Pain Inventory (CBPI) is a published owner-completed pain-tracking scale. Talk to your vet about implementing it.
Hunger
- Warm the food to release aromas
- Strongly flavoured wet food or freshly cooked plain chicken
- Capromorelin (Entyce) is FDA-approved for canine appetite stimulation
- Maropitant (Cerenia) treats nausea, which often underlies inappetence
- Hand-feed small frequent meals when bowl-feeding fails
Hydration
- Multiple water sources around the home
- Pet drinking fountains (some senior dogs prefer running water)
- Water or low-salt broth added to food
- Subcutaneous fluid therapy at home — vets routinely train owners for this; it transforms quality of life in dogs with chronic kidney disease
Hygiene
- Soft absorbent bedding changed frequently
- Gentle warm-water cleaning of soiled areas
- Shaved hindquarter feathering to keep the area cleaner
- Dog incontinence pants for affected females
- Phenylpropanolamine (Propalin) for incontinence due to urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence
Happiness
- Bring the dog to family interaction, not the other way around
- Gentle grooming sessions, favourite people, familiar bed
- A “sniff-walk by car” to a favourite spot when walking is no longer possible
- Reduced enthusiasm can also reflect untreated pain or depression — re-assess these
Mobility
- Non-slip flooring — rugs, runners, vinyl strips. Slippery floors are a major hidden contributor to mobility loss.
- Ramps for cars, sofas, beds
- Harnesses with a back handle to help stand
- Physiotherapy and hydrotherapy — evidence-based for arthritis
- Dog wheelchairs — for severe hind-limb mobility loss; many dogs adapt brilliantly and live comfortable months to years longer
The “More Good Days Than Bad” Domain
This is the single most useful domain. When this score consistently drops below 5/10, the conversation about end-of-life care should be active and ongoing — and the dog is telling you, day by day, that other interventions have run out of room.
When to Re-Score
- Stable disease: weekly
- Declining: every 3-4 days
- End-stage: daily
Keep brief notes alongside the score: what happened that day, what worked, what did not. Over time the notes plus scores create a clear picture that informs the eventual decision.
End-of-Life Care – The Conversations Worth Having Early
Far better to have the conversation before a crisis forces it. Specific decisions worth discussing in advance with your vet:
- What is the realistic next intervention? And the one after that?
- What would push toward intensive care, and what would not? Many owners decide in advance against major surgery or ICU admission for very old dogs – that decision belongs in the conversation early.
- What does hospice / palliative care look like for this dog? Pain control, comfort, dignity-focused care can extend high-quality life by weeks or months.
- When the time comes, what does humane euthanasia look like? Where would it happen (home is increasingly possible), who would be there, what would the aftercare be?
These conversations are easier in calm clinic visits than in 11 pm emergencies. Vets who do palliative work are usually grateful when owners want to think ahead.
Honest Caveats
- This calculator is a decision aid, not a decision. The right answer comes from the whole picture – the calculator is one input.
- Owner-rated scores tend to be slightly more optimistic than vet-rated scores. If your scores stay high but your vet looks worried, ask about specifics rather than dismissing the worry.
- A single dimension can drive overall quality even when others are acceptable – severe untreated pain alone is a powerful argument for intervention.
- Sudden catastrophic deterioration is different from slow decline. This calculator is most useful for the slow decline of chronic disease, not for acute crises.
Conclusion
The seven-domain Villalobos-style framework is the most widely-used structured quality-of-life assessment in canine hospice and palliative care. Use it to track trend, to identify the most modifiable domains, and to inform conversations with your vet about whether interventions are still working. Many quality-of-life problems are more treatable than owners realise, and few decisions matter more than getting the end-of-life journey right for a beloved dog.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my dog has a good quality of life?
Use a structured assessment rather than relying on memory of good and bad days. The seven-domain framework above (Pain, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, More good days than bad) is widely used in veterinary palliative care. Score each domain 0 (worst) to 10 (best) over the past 3-7 days and watch the TREND – a steady decline over weeks tells you more than any single day’s score.
When should I consider euthanasia for my dog?
End-of-life conversations should be active and ongoing when quality-of-life scores consistently fall below ~30/70, when the ‘more good days than bad’ domain consistently scores <5/10, when significant pain is no longer adequately controlled, or when multiple domains are simultaneously low. The decision is yours and your vet’s, considering the whole picture. Many quality-of-life problems are more modifiable than owners initially realise, so start with optimising care.
What is the HHHHHMM scale?
The HHHHHMM scale is the published 7-domain canine quality-of-life framework developed by Dr Alice Villalobos in her work on veterinary hospice and palliative care. The acronym captures Hurt, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, and More good days than bad – each scored 0-10. It is the most widely-cited canine quality-of-life construct and is used by veterinary hospice services worldwide. This calculator implements the same 7-domain construct with original wording while crediting the underlying scientific contribution.
Can chronic pain in my old dog be controlled?
Modern canine pain management is genuinely effective. A layered approach combining NSAIDs (carprofen, meloxicam, Galliprant), gabapentin or pregabalin for neuropathic pain, anti-NGF monoclonal antibody (Librela / bedinvetmab) for arthritis, and adjunct opioids gives most dogs substantial pain relief. Talk to your vet about escalation – pain is the single most modifiable quality-of-life domain in older dogs.
What is dog hospice care?
Hospice or palliative care for dogs focuses on comfort, dignity and quality of life rather than cure. It typically includes optimised pain management, appetite stimulation, hydration support (sometimes subcutaneous fluids at home), hygiene assistance, mobility support and family-led care of a dog who can no longer be cured. Many dogs spend comfortable weeks or months in hospice care before peaceful end of life. Veterinary hospice services exist in most areas.
How often should I re-score my dog’s quality of life?
Weekly during stable disease. Every 3-4 days when declining. Daily in end-stage disease. The TREND across multiple scores is more informative than any single score. Keep brief notes alongside the score about what happened, what worked and what did not – this builds the picture that eventually informs the end-of-life decision.
References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- Villalobos AE. Canine and Feline Geriatric Oncology – Honoring the Human-Animal Bond, 2nd ed., Wiley Blackwell, 2017 – the published 7-domain quality-of-life construct.
- Shanan A, Pierce J, Shearer T (eds). Hospice and Palliative Care for Companion Animals: Principles and Practice. Wiley Blackwell, 2017.
- International Association for Animal Hospice and Palliative Care (IAAHPC). iaahpc.org.
- Brown DC, Boston RC, Coyne JC, Farrar JT. Development and psychometric testing of an instrument for evaluating chronic pain in dogs (CBPI). American Journal of Veterinary Research, 2007 – the Canine Brief Pain Inventory.
- Reid J, Nolan AM, Scott EM. Measuring pain in dogs and cats using structured behavioural observation. The Veterinary Journal, 2018.
- PuppaDogs. Life Expectancy Calculator and Heatstroke Risk Calculator. puppadogs.com.









