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By Jared White
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Updated May 29, 2026
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3 min read
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Longevity
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Educational, not veterinary advice
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Educational, not veterinary advice. This article is for general information and is not a substitute for veterinary care. Always consult your veterinarian before changing your dog's diet, supplements, medication, exercise routine, or care plan.
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The framework in one sentence
Doggevity organizes a dog's health into twelve connected pillars — so instead of chasing products, you build a balanced system. No single pillar is a cure; together, they're a foundation to build and refine with your veterinarian.
Why a framework at all?
Dog health information is overwhelming and contradictory. One site says fresh food, another says kibble; one influencer swears by a supplement, another calls it useless. The Doggevity framework cuts through that noise by giving every recommendation a place. Instead of asking "is this product good?" you ask "which pillar does this serve, and is that pillar a priority for my dog right now?"
That's the systems-thinking shift at the heart of DogHealthStack: dog health is not one product, it is a system. The pillars interact — a lean weight helps mobility, mobility supports weight, preventive care protects all of it — so the goal is balance, not maximizing any single piece.
The 12 pillars of Doggevity
Here are the twelve. You don't build them all at once — you start with what matters most for your dog's life stage and concerns, and grow the system over time.
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Nutrition
A complete, balanced diet appropriate for your dog's life stage. The daily input that shapes everything else.
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Weight
Keeping your dog lean — among the most powerful, evidence-associated levers in canine health.
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Movement
Consistent, appropriate daily exercise for body and mind. Consistency beats intensity.
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Mobility & Joints
Supporting comfortable movement through weight, exercise, home setup, and vet-discussed joint care.
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Preventive Care
Regular vet visits, screenings, and parasite prevention that catch problems early.
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Dental Care
A simple home routine plus professional care — oral health connects to whole-body health.
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Supplements
Used thoughtfully and discussed with your vet, certain supplements may support specific needs.
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Monitoring
Trackers, smart collars, and DNA tests that turn vague worry into data you can act on.
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Environment
A safe, comfortable home — traction, temperature, rest, and reduced hazards.
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Emotional Well-being
Enrichment, companionship, and low chronic stress. Mental health is health.
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Senior Support
Comfort, cognition, and quality-of-life tracking as your dog ages.
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End-of-Life Dignity
Planning ahead with compassion, so the hardest decisions are grounded in your dog's quality of life.
How to use the framework
Think of the pillars as a checklist for thinking, not a shopping list. A practical way to apply it:
- Audit. Walk through the twelve pillars and honestly note where your dog is strong and where there are gaps.
- Prioritize. Pick the one or two pillars with the biggest gap or the biggest impact for your dog right now — often weight and movement.
- Build. Make a small, sustainable change in that pillar. A measured food portion. A daily walk. A vet appointment booked.
- Discuss. Bring your plan to your veterinarian, who can tailor it to your specific dog.
- Track and adjust. Watch what changes, and revisit the framework as your dog ages.
You can see this in action in Luna's Longevity Stack, where we apply all twelve pillars to one real dog — including the honest tradeoffs and the things our vet told us to change.
🩺 Questions to ask your vet
- Looking at these pillars, where do you think my dog has the biggest opportunity?
- Is my dog's current weight and body condition where it should be?
- What preventive care and screenings are due for my dog's age?
- Are there any pillars I should prioritize given my dog's breed or history?
Get the Dog Longevity Checklist
A practical checklist covering every pillar of the Doggevity system — and the questions to ask your vet.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Doggevity System? +
The Doggevity System is DogHealthStack's framework for thinking clearly about a longer, healthier dog life. It organizes dog health into 12 connected pillars — including nutrition, weight, movement, mobility, preventive care, dental care, supplements, monitoring, environment, emotional well-being, senior support, and planning — so owners can build a balanced system instead of chasing single products.
Is the Doggevity System a treatment plan? +
No. It is an educational organizing framework, not a medical or treatment plan. It's designed to help you have better conversations with your veterinarian, who should guide any real decisions about your dog's care.
Do I need to do all 12 pillars at once? +
No. The framework is meant to be used gradually. Most owners get the biggest return from the foundation — nutrition, weight, and movement — and then improve the weakest pillars over time.
How often should I review my dog's health routine? +
Reviewing the foundation regularly and revisiting the full framework at preventive vet visits works well for most dogs. Your veterinarian can suggest the right cadence for your dog's age and needs.
Is DogHealthStack veterinary advice? +
No. All content is educational and is not a substitute for veterinary care. Always consult your veterinarian before changing your dog's diet, supplements, medication, exercise routine, or care plan.
Creator, DogHealthStack · Luna's owner · Not a veterinarian
Jared White is the creator of DogHealthStack and Luna's owner. He applies a systems-thinking approach to dog health, longevity, and product research.
He is not a veterinarian. All health content here is educational and should be discussed with a licensed veterinarian.
More about Jared →