A New Habit to Watch Your Cat’s Health! Patent-Pending Cat Urine Health Check Sheet “JIN Nyan Sign” Launches Crowdfunding on CAMPFIRE
Key facts
- A New Habit to Watch Your Cat’s Health! Patent-Pending Cat Urine Health Check Sheet “JIN Nyan Sign” Launches Crowdfunding on CAMPFIRE
- JIN Activity Lab of Hayashi Giken Co., Ltd. will start a crowdfunding campaign on CAMPFIRE from June 15, 2026 to support development of "JIN Nyan Sign," a patent-pending cat urine health check sheet designed to help owners notice subtle daily changes in their cats and prompt veterinary consultation.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Mon Jun 15 2026 20:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
JIN Activity Lab of Hayashi Giken Co., Ltd. will start a crowdfunding campaign on CAMPFIRE from June 15, 2026 to support development of "JIN Nyan Sign," a patent-pending cat urine health check sheet designed to help owners notice subtle daily changes in their cats and prompt veterinary consultation.
- Citation
- A New Habit to Watch Your Cat’s Health! Patent-Pending Cat Urine Health Check Sheet “JIN Nyan Sign” Launches Crowdfunding on CAMPFIRE (Mon Jun 15 2026 20:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Mon Jun 15 2026 20:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
JIN Activity Lab of Hayashi Giken Co., Ltd. will start a crowdfunding campaign on CAMPFIRE from June 15, 2026 to support development of "JIN Nyan Sign," a patent-pending cat urine health check sheet designed to help owners notice subtle daily changes in their cats and prompt veterinary consultation.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: How is the JIN nyan sign used?
- A: Place the sheet in the litter box to check for reactive changes, or collect urine and apply with a dropper; sampling is recommended for multi-cat households.
- Q: What does the test indicate?
- A: It does not diagnose disease but highlights deviations in urine appearance/reaction to prompt veterinary consultation.
- Q: Is it suitable for kittens and senior cats?
- A: Generally yes, but large variability in urine volume or behavior warrants consulting a veterinarian.