
Emergency After Hours
Our after hours emergency hours are Monday-Friday 5:30pm-9pm, Saturdary 9am-9pm, and Sunday 1pm-6pm. You must call the clinic at 918-733-4525 and leave a voicemail for the Doctor to call you back. In the event of an emergency, please contact the number provided above and leave a detailed voicemail outlining the situation. Our on-call doctor will return your call as soon as the voicemail is received. We kindly ask that you refrain from coming to the clinic until you have been contacted by the on-call doctor and given specific instructions to do so. This is important, as the on-call doctor may not be present at the clinic when you arrive if they are unaware of your visit. Emergency Fee & a Deposit are required at the time of service. Entire payment will be due at time of pick up of animal. No payment plans are accepted. Care Credit is available. Any calls we are not able to fulfill will be forwarded to other emergency services. Current Clients are those we have seen animals for within the last year.

The following list is not all inclusive but some examples of what we would consider an emergency.
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Bleeding that will not stop
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Difficulty breathing
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Severe vomiting/diarrhea more than two episodes in a 24-hour period, or either of these combined with obvious illness or any of the other problems listed here Known toxin exposure (such as antifreeze, xylitol, chocolate, rodent poison, etc.) Persistent seizures or changes in mental status
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Unsuccessful attempts to urinate
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Severe pain
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HBC
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Attacked by Another Animal
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Lacerations
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Foreign Object Ingestion
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Trouble Giving Birth
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Horse Not Swallowing Feed/Choke, Rolling/Colic
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Any Animal Laying on Side Not Responsive
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Male Cat Not Urinating
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Injury to Penis, Not Able to Retract It
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Falling Injury
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Not Eating or Drinking for 24 hours
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Sick Diabetic
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Animal Choking, difficulty breathing or nonstop coughing and gagging
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Bleeding from nose, mouth, rectum, coughing up blood, or blood in urine Inability to urinate or pass feces (stool), or obvious pain associated with urinating or passing stool
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Injuries to Eye
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Fractured bones, severe lameness or inability to move leg(s)
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Heat stress or heatstroke