In shelter environments, the link between behavior and disease is life-and-death. A shelter cat showing crouched posture, dilated pupils, and anorexia is not just "depressed"; she is at immediate risk of upper respiratory infection (URV) due to stress-induced immunocompromise. Progressive shelters now use "behavioral rounds" alongside medical rounds. Staff are trained to score every animal’s behavioral welfare daily, intervening with enrichment, quiet space, or foster care before the physical symptoms emerge.

So, what's the impact of Zooskool on education? Here are a few examples:

One of the most critical contributions of veterinary science to ethology is the identification of "masking pathologies"—medical conditions that present exclusively as behavioral changes.