--- title: "How to Prepare a Rabbit Emergency Information Sheet" url: "https://meganspetsitting.com/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-rabbits-rabbit-emergency-information-sheet/" description: "Learn how to prepare a rabbit emergency information sheet with vet contacts, medications, appetite notes, litter habits, warning signs, and sitting care details." focus_keyword: "rabbit emergency information sheet" word_count: 1892 estimated_token_count: 2555 --- # How to Prepare a Rabbit Emergency Information Sheet A rabbit emergency information sheet gives your sitter clear instructions if something seems wrong while you are away. It should include vet contacts, medical notes, appetite details, litter habits, warning signs, and emergency preferences. Category: [Rabbit Care Resources](/rabbit-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/) Related service: [Rabbit Sitting in Charlottesville, VA](/rabbit-sitting-in-charlottesville-va/) --- ## Important Rabbit Safety Note If your rabbit stops eating, stops pooping, produces fewer or smaller droppings, seems bloated, sits hunched in pain, becomes weak, has trouble breathing, collapses, has a serious injury, or suddenly seems severely unwell, contact a rabbit-savvy veterinarian or emergency clinic immediately. --- ## Quick Answer A rabbit emergency information sheet should include your rabbit-savvy veterinarian, emergency clinic, owner contact information, medication instructions, feeding routine, hay and water preferences, normal droppings, warning signs, carrier location, authorization preferences, and what your sitter should do if your rabbit seems unwell. --- ## Why a Rabbit Emergency Information Sheet Matters Rabbits can become seriously ill quickly, and they often hide pain or weakness. When you are away, your sitter needs clear written information before there is a problem. A good emergency sheet helps prevent delays. It tells your sitter who to call, what is normal for your rabbit, what is not normal, where supplies are located, and how you want urgent decisions handled. This article is for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for veterinary care. If your rabbit has appetite changes, droppings changes, pain signs, breathing changes, injury, or sudden illness, contact a rabbit-savvy veterinarian. --- ## Start With Veterinary Contact Information Your emergency sheet should clearly list your rabbit-savvy veterinarian, regular clinic phone number, emergency clinic phone number, and clinic addresses. Include the name your rabbit is registered under, your name, and any account or client details the clinic may need. If your regular vet does not handle after-hours emergencies, write down exactly where your sitter should call first when the clinic is closed. --- ## List How to Reach You Quickly Include your cell phone number, backup phone number, email address, travel contact information, and the best way to reach you during your trip. If you may be unavailable during flights, work events, remote travel, or poor service, include a trusted backup contact. Your sitter should know who is allowed to make decisions if you cannot be reached. --- ## Add Important Rabbit Health Notes Write down your rabbit's age, sex, spay or neuter status if known, medical conditions, past emergencies, dental history, digestive issues, mobility concerns, and current medications. Include anything that could affect care, such as previous GI stasis concerns, urinary issues, seizures, arthritis, head tilt, chronic dental problems, or appetite sensitivity. Even if a condition seems stable, your sitter should know what is normal and what has been a problem before. --- ## Make Medication Instructions Very Clear If your rabbit takes medication, include the medication name, dose, timing, route, storage instructions, and whether it must be given with food. Also include what to do if a dose is missed, spit out, delayed, or refused. Medication notes should be written clearly enough that your sitter does not need to guess under pressure. --- ## Explain Normal Appetite and Feeding Habits Appetite is one of the most important things to track for rabbits. Your emergency sheet should explain what your rabbit normally eats and what would be unusual. Include hay type, hay placement, pellets, greens, herbs, treats, feeding times, favorite foods, foods to avoid, and how much your rabbit usually eats. Tell your sitter what should trigger concern, such as refusing hay, ignoring favorite foods, eating less than usual, or leaving food untouched. --- ## What to Include on a Rabbit Emergency Information Sheet The goal is to make important decisions easier during a stressful moment. ### Vet contacts Include your rabbit-savvy vet, emergency clinic, addresses, phone numbers, and after-hours instructions. ### Health notes List medical history, current medications, past emergencies, dental issues, mobility concerns, and anything your sitter should know. ### Normal routine Include appetite, hay eating, water habits, litter box output, behavior, favorite foods, hiding spots, and usual activity level. ### Action plan Write down warning signs, who to call, carrier location, authorization preferences, and backup contacts. --- ## Include Water Preferences and Drinking Habits Tell your sitter whether your rabbit uses a bowl, bottle, or both. Include where water should be placed and how often it should be refreshed. If your rabbit has strong water preferences, such as a certain bowl location or bottle setup, write that down. Sudden changes in drinking, especially with appetite changes, urine changes, weakness, or fewer droppings, should be treated as important information. --- ## Describe Normal Droppings and Urine Habits Your sitter should know what your rabbit's normal droppings look like and how much output is typical. Include whether your rabbit normally leaves stray droppings, uses a litter box consistently, has urine habits to watch, or has a history of litter box changes. Fewer droppings, smaller droppings, no droppings, straining to urinate, blood in the urine, or sudden litter box changes should be taken seriously. --- ## Write Down What Should Trigger a Call Your emergency sheet should clearly list the signs that mean your sitter should contact you, your vet, or an emergency clinic. These may include not eating, not pooping, fewer droppings, bloating, hunched posture, loud tooth grinding, weakness, collapse, breathing trouble, injury, bleeding, or sudden severe behavior changes. Do not assume a sitter will know which signs matter most for rabbits. Put them in writing. --- ## Explain Where Emergency Supplies Are Located Include where the carrier is stored, how to open it, whether your rabbit is used to it, and whether any towel, mat, or bedding should go inside. Also list where medications, feeding supplies, cleaning supplies, hay, pellets, litter, syringes, records, and cleaning tools are located. In an emergency, the sitter should not have to search the house for the carrier or vet paperwork. --- ## Clarify Emergency Authorization and Payment Preferences Your sitter should know whether they are authorized to transport your rabbit, call your vet, speak with the clinic, approve emergency care, or use a backup contact if you cannot be reached. If your veterinary clinic requires payment information, consent forms, or an emergency care authorization, ask the clinic what they recommend before you travel. These details are much easier to prepare before a trip than during an emergency. --- ## Add Normal Behavior and Handling Notes Include what relaxed behavior looks like for your rabbit and what stress looks like. Tell your sitter whether your rabbit likes attention, avoids handling, hides from new people, charges, nips, freezes, thumps, follows people, or needs extra time to approach. Handling notes are especially important if your rabbit may need to be placed in a carrier for veterinary care. --- ## Include Household and Habitat Notes Your rabbit emergency information sheet should also include anything about the home setup that affects safety. Write down which areas your rabbit can access, which doors or gates must stay closed, whether the rabbit avoids certain floors, and whether there are unsafe chewing targets. Include notes about cords, rugs, plants, baseboards, furniture, exercise pens, baby gates, hideouts, tunnels, litter boxes, and any spaces your rabbit should not enter. --- ## Explain What Is Normal for Your Rabbit Emergency planning is easier when the sitter knows the difference between normal and concerning behavior. For example, one rabbit may normally hide from new people but still eat well and produce normal droppings. Another rabbit may normally run to greet people and beg for food. If the second rabbit suddenly hides and refuses food, that is much more concerning. Your sheet should help the sitter compare your rabbit's behavior to their own normal routine. --- ## Keep the Sheet Easy to Find A rabbit emergency information sheet should not be buried in a long message thread or hidden in a folder. Print a copy if possible, or place a clear digital copy where your sitter can easily access it. You can also keep a copy near your rabbit's supplies, carrier, or feeding instructions. Make sure your sitter knows where it is before the first visit. --- ## Review the Sheet Before Each Trip Rabbit routines can change. Before each trip, review your emergency sheet and update medication doses, food amounts, vet information, emergency contacts, and health notes. Make sure the sheet is easy to find and that your sitter knows where it is. A clear, current emergency sheet can make rabbit sitting safer and less stressful for everyone. --- ## Related Rabbit Resources Continue learning about rabbit safety, appetite changes, health signs, and litter box habits: - [Rabbit Care Resources](/rabbit-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/) - [Signs Your Rabbit Needs a Vet](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-rabbits-signs-your-rabbit-needs-a-vet/) - [Why Rabbit Appetite Changes Matter](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-rabbits-why-rabbit-appetite-changes-matter/) - [Understanding Rabbit Litter Box Habits](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-rabbits-understanding-rabbit-litter-box-habits/) --- ## In-Home Rabbit Sitting in Charlottesville Megan's Pet Sitting provides in-home rabbit sitting in Charlottesville, VA, with thoughtful drop-in visits designed around each rabbit's routine, safety needs, comfort level, and personality. Visits may include fresh hay, food, water, litter box care, enclosure checks, habitat checks, gentle companionship when wanted, observation, photos, videos, and detailed updates. Related services: - [Rabbit Sitting Services](/rabbit-sitting-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Small Animal Sitting Services](/small-animal-sitting-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Rates and Pricing](/pet-sitting-rates-pricing-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Contact Megan's Pet Sitting](/contact-megans-pet-sitting-of-charlottesville/) --- ## Need Rabbit Sitting in Charlottesville? If your rabbit needs careful observation, emergency notes followed closely, fresh hay, clean water, litter box checks, familiar routines, and detailed updates, Megan's Pet Sitting can help you explore whether drop-in rabbit sitting is the right fit. [Contact Megan's Pet Sitting](/contact-megans-pet-sitting-of-charlottesville/) [Back to Rabbit Care Resources](/rabbit-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/)