Why UK dogs are dying of heatstroke

The Royal Veterinary College's VetCompass study (2020, updated 2023) showed that 14% of UK dog heatstroke cases are fatal. The 2022 heatwave caused a record spike. Most cases happen below 25 °C — owners underestimate humidity and exercise intensity.

Highest-risk dogs

Early signs (act NOW)

Advanced signs (emergency)

First aid — the first 10 minutes

  1. Get out of the heat now: shade, AC indoors, car with the AC on full.
  2. Cool with cool (not ice-cold) water. The RVC's 2023 update emphasises this: tepid-to-cool water immediately, all over the body. The old advice to avoid cooling has been reversed.
  3. Wet belly, armpits, groin, paws, ears — biggest blood vessels are there.
  4. Fan them while wet — evaporation does most of the cooling.
  5. Small sips of water if conscious. Don't force it.
  6. Vet immediately. Even if they look fine — organ damage (liver, kidney, clotting) often shows up 24-48 hours later.

What NOT to do

Prevention

When to call the emergency vet

Any heatstroke episode requires a vet visit, even if the dog recovers. Out of hours: most UK areas have 24/7 emergency clinics (Vets Now, BluePearl). Cost £150-300 for the visit, £500-1,500 for hospitalisation.

How CanAI helps

Ask the AI chat for instant triage when you're not sure if it's heatstroke. Track temperature warnings and emergency vets near you in CanAI's health section. And one heatstroke hospitalisation costs more than three years of decent pet insurance — worth considering.