Cats are the #1 rabid domestic animal in the U.S. — help us document the verification gap. National survey open for U.S. shelters & rescues. Participate in the Survey →

National Pet ID™

A verification and interoperability framework connecting shelters, clinics, and public health agencies through companion animal identification — without replacing existing systems.

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Verification Layer

Cross-platform microchip verification and health record authentication without replacing existing systems.

Interoperability

Connects shelters, clinics, and county agencies through shared data standards — not a new database.

Rabies Traceability

Enables pre-exposure vaccine verification and movement tracking to support public health response.

Reproductive Status

Tracks sterilization status across organizations — preventing duplicate procedures and creating verified profiles that unlock low-cost services for owners.

Founder

Built by Dr. Angie Gil Santana, DVM — veterinarian, researcher, and architect of a national companion animal identification and public health traceability framework for the U.S.

Meet the Founder

How It Works (Overview)

  • Assign persistent, cross-platform animal identifiers
  • Verify vaccination records including rabies at intake and transfer
  • Track animal movement across organizations and jurisdictions
  • Enable rapid public health response with accessible history
Learn More

Dashboard Preview Demo Data — Not Live

Pilot preview (demo metrics) — illustrative only

1,247
Registered Pets
Verified profiles
23
Open Lost/Found
Active cases
92%
Rabies Coverage
Aggregated
67%
Spay/Neuter
Reported
Open Platform

About

Project Origin

National Pet ID is a research-driven interoperability framework developed by Dr. Angie Gil Santana, DVM, addressing documented failures in U.S. companion animal identification, vaccination verification, and inter-jurisdictional traceability — with a primary focus on rabies surveillance infrastructure.

Motivation

Design Principles

View Research Initiative Request Pilot Access

How It Works

The Problem: Three-Node Failure

Evidence from CDC, JAVMA, and peer-reviewed literature documents a three-node systemic failure in U.S. companion animal identification — each node independently amplifying rabies and zoonotic disease risk.

The Solution: Voluntary Interoperability Layer

National Pet ID is a voluntary verification framework that addresses each failure node without replacing existing platforms:

Technical precedent: Dalla Villa et al. (2013) demonstrated this web service architecture integrating 3 Italian regions with 300,000+ dogs without replacing existing platforms.

Workflow Process

1. Assign Persistent ID 2. Verify Health Records 3. Track Movement 4. Enable PH Response
  1. Assign Persistent Identifier: Animals receive a cross-platform ID linked to existing microchip and shelter records
  2. Verify Health Records: Rabies vaccination and health history verified at intake and before inter-organizational transfer
  3. Track Movement: Standardized health data travels with the animal across jurisdictions
  4. Enable Public Health Response: Complete verified history accessible to health authorities during disease events
  5. Aggregate Surveillance Data: De-identified trends support rabies vaccination coverage monitoring and outbreak prediction
Read the Research Open Platform

Platform

Dashboard (Preview) Demo Data — Not Live

Preview environment — features under development. All metrics shown are illustrative demo data.

National Pet ID — Pilot Preview

1,247
Registered Pets
Demo data
23
Open Lost/Found
Demo data
92%
Rabies Vaccination
Demo data
67%
Spay/Neuter
Demo data
3
Zoonotic Alerts
Planned module
156
Recent Activity
Demo data

This dashboard is a functional preview to demonstrate workflows. All figures are demo data. Pilot access is invitation-only.

Sample Pet Records Demo Data

Demo table — illustrative data, not from real pilot
Scroll to view all columns
Pet ID Name Species Status Rabies Spay/Neuter Zoonotic Registered By Last Update
NPI-2025-001 Max Dog Reunited Up to date Neutered None Austin Animal Center 2025-01-08
NPI-2025-002 Luna Cat Lost Due soon Spayed Flag: Respiratory Dr. Smith Clinic 2025-01-09
NPI-2025-003 Rocky Dog Shelter Hold Unknown Unknown Flag: GI County Intake 2025-01-10
NPI-2025-004 Bella Dog Active Up to date Not reported None Partner Shelter 2025-01-10
Active Research — Data Collection Open · 2025

Research Initiative

Cats are the most frequently reported rabid domestic animal in the U.S. — 222 confirmed cases in 2023. Most exposure events involve animals with no verifiable ID or vaccination record accessible to public health authorities. This research documents the identification and traceability gap that makes post-exposure response reactive instead of preventive.

Participate in the Survey

The Verification Gap: A Documented Public Health Risk

In August 2024, a single unmanaged cat colony in Cecil County, Maryland triggered a multi-state public health response — hotel record reviews, reverse-911 messaging, and cross-state health department coordination. The cat had no registered ID, no vaccination record, and no colony management program. The same month, CDC reported that 18% of imported dogs with documented rabies vaccinations could not confirm revaccination compliance because no verification system existed at the point of entry.

Sources: Ludmer et al., CDC MMWR 2025 · Freedman et al., CDC MMWR 2024 · Boutelle et al., JAVMA 2025

Three-Node Failure Model

Evidence from 28 peer-reviewed sources supports a three-node model of systemic failure that National Pet ID directly addresses:

Node 1 — Identification

Animals lack persistent, cross-platform identifiers

Shelter, clinic, and government records use incompatible systems with no interoperability. No national governing body or standardized data collection exists for companion animals.

Vinic et al. 2019 · Woodruff et al. 2019–2020 · Dalla Villa et al. 2013
Node 2 — Movement Without Verification

Animals transfer across jurisdictions without verified health records

Only 35% of rescue organizations test animals before interstate transport. Rabies vaccination verification rates during transfers are unknown. Import compliance is confirmed only retrospectively.

Drake & Parrish 2019 · Freedman CDC MMWR 2024
Node 3 — Response Latency

Disease events require manual reconstruction of animal history

When rabies exposure occurs, public health authorities must manually review hotel records, coordinate across state health departments, and use reverse-911 — adding days to response time.

Ludmer et al. CDC MMWR 2025 · Freedman CDC MMWR 2024
National Pet ID addresses each node through a voluntary web service layer: persistent cross-platform IDs (Node 1), standardized health record transfer at movement (Node 2), and accessible verified history for real-time public health response (Node 3) — without replacing existing shelter management systems.

National Survey — Now Open

Is your organization able to verify an incoming animal's rabies vaccination history — and track sterilization status across transfers? We are collecting primary data from animal shelter and rescue professionals across all 50 states. Your responses are anonymous and will contribute directly to a peer-reviewed publication in Animals (MDPI, 2025).

18 questions · 5–7 minutes · Anonymous · No commitment required · Findings shared pre-publication with respondents

Open Survey
50
States Targeted
189
Organizations Contacted
18
Survey Items
28
Peer-Reviewed Sources

Federal Policy Alignment

Contact the Research Team

For research inquiries, collaboration opportunities, letters of support, or to request pre-publication findings:

Dr. Angie Gil Santana, DVM
Principal Researcher, National Pet ID Research Initiative
research@nationalpetid.com

Take the Survey

Get Involved

🔬 Participate in Our Research Survey

Is your organization able to verify an incoming animal's rabies vaccination history? Can you track sterilization status when animals transfer between organizations? Your experience is the data. Complete our anonymous 18-question survey and contribute directly to a peer-reviewed publication in Animals (MDPI, 2025) on national animal identification and rabies traceability infrastructure.

Open Survey — 18 Questions, Anonymous

Request Pilot Access

Join our invitation-only pilot program to help shape the future of companion animal identification and interoperability.

Contact Information

For research inquiries and letters of support: research@nationalpetid.com

For general inquiries: info@nationalpetid.com

Login (Beta)

Beta access is granted by invitation to pilot partners only. This login is a demo experience for previewing platform workflows.

Don't have access? Request pilot invitation