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GROTON CITY ANIMAL HOSPITAL
"Caring For Pets And Their People"
Providing Care For Horses, Alpacas, Llamas, Goats, Sheep, Dogs, Cats & Pocket
Pets
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Large Animal Emergency
Services
Large animal on-call time is split between our two
large animal veterinarians at the Groton City Animal Hospital (Dr. Kathy Baxendell and Dr. Katherine Dart).
Our
veterinarians are here to help you whether you just need phone advice or need an
emergency farm call. In case of
an emergency, please call the office at (607)898-4482. Please do
not use any other numbers for emergencies.
You may not reach the correct
doctor on call and necessary emergency care or advice may be delayed.
Please reserve the after-hours service for emergencies
only.
Our staff is working hard to answer calls and to
provide care for those patients with medical conditions of an urgent nature. If
you have a non-urgent message you may leave a voice-mail message or please call
us back during our regular office hours. Please see below for additional
information on urgent emergencies.
After hours, a doctor will promptly return your call after you
leave a message with our answering service. Be sure to give the service
operator your name, a phone number where you can be reached, and a brief
summary of your emergency. You must give the operator at least
some idea of the nature of your call as we cannot respond to calls without a
reason. Please give the operator any numbers that you can be reached at
including a barn number if your horse is boarded out.
After leaving your message, please try to
leave your phone line open for the next 10 to 15 minutes so that our doctors can
reach you. If you do not hear from the doctor in 15 minutes or so please call
the office again. Please remember that we may be in the middle of treating
another emergency when you call and may not be able to call you back immediately
but will get in touch with you as soon as we can. If you are able, assessment of
your animals vital signs including temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate,
gut sounds and gum color are helpful information to provide to the doctor when
they call. This information helps the doctor assess the severity of the
problem that you are experiencing with your animal.
In the event that our doctors need to visit your farm, please
be prepared to give directions to your farm or where the horse is boarded. Please do not assume that the doctor will know how to get to your farm!
Detailed directions from major roads are the most helpful. Include any
information that you feel might be helpful in finding you especially if it is
dark. Mailbox colors, landmarks at turns or the end of your driveway and
house/barn colors are some things that are helpful. Keep in mind that if a
vet can't find your house for an animal emergency, would an ambulance be able to
find it for a human emergency? Good reason to have a house number readily
readable from the road.
Before the doctor arrives at your farm, clear a work space for
the doctor and patient.
Providing a clean, well lit area to work is ideal, but
at least dry and out of the wind will work in a pinch. Set up extra
lighting if needed and consider having an extension cord handy for clippers or
an extra light.
Most important while waiting for help, keep yourself safe. Horses that are painful (i.e. colic, dystocia) can be very violent when reacting
to pain.
Our veterinarians are not equipped nor do they want to treat
human patients!
In the event that the two large animal veterinarians are
unavailable, there will always be a back up veterinarian that will be set up to
cover
emergencies for our clients. Drs. Christy Cable, Mike Ball, Jeff LaPoint and Ed
Arrington are
the veterinarians that you may hear from in this situation.
Our emergency service is designed to provide high quality care
in the event of an emergency with your animal in addition to giving our veterinarians
and technicians more valuable time with their families. We thank you for your
understanding and welcome any suggestions.
Examples of Extremely Urgent Emergencies:
- Mare or other female animal in labor and unable to
deliver
- Uncontrollable abdominal pain (colic)
- Broken limb or acutely non-weight bearing on a limb
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Severe bleeding that is not controlled with pressure
- Animal down and unable to get up or animal trapped in
trailer, stall or fence.
Examples of "Urgencies" or same day type emergencies:
(please call ASAP to consult with one of the veterinarians)
- Swollen, cloudy or painful eye
- Severe, watery diarrhea
- Laceration or severe trauma
- High fever especially with loss of appetite
- Mild colic that has not resolved in 45 to 60 minutes
- Weak foal or cria, especially if it is not able to get up to nurse
- Retained placenta (greater than 4 hours since delivery)
- Choke (esophageal obstruction) that has not resolved in 30 minutes
- Sudden loss of coordination or balance
These are only guidelines. Please do not hesitate to
contact the office if you are unsure about the nature of your concern. We
would much rather see an animal early on, than try to patch up a train wreak.
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