Vaccination

Why vaccination of your pets? When to be vaccinated? What to be vaccinated? What’s the authenticity of the procedure?
As vaccination is a core event in your pet’s life so, these questions are worth million dollars. Interested in knowing the answers? Okay, that’s great.
Always visit very first your vet with your pet whenever you adopt it. Ofcourse, your vet would advise you to get your kitten or puppy vaccinated at 40-50th day of birth. Kittens are vaccinated against three deadly viruses including feline panleukopenia virus, feline calicivirus and feline rhinotracheitis or feline herpes virus. Biofel PCH is commonly available product in the country. The second vaccination shot called booster shot is given after 20 days of first shot. This multiplies immunity of your kitten against these three viruses.
Similarly puppies or pups are vaccinated at 40-50th day of their birth. This vaccination is usually against deadly canine parvovirus, canine distemper, canine hepatitis, influenza and leptospirosis. The second shot is done after 20 days. We advises you to get at least 3 vaccination shots consecutively with an interval of 20 days each. Then the annual boosters are needed to remember every year to celebrate your pets’ birthdays many more.

Emerency Call

“He who is cruel to animals becomes hard also in his dealings with men. We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals.”

Immanuel Kant

“Animals are sentient, intelligent, perceptive, funny and entertaining. We owe them a duty of care as we do to children.”

Michael Morpurgo

Frequently Asked Questions

When your pet has a medical emergency, you don’t want to be left with unanswered questions. It pays to be prepared, so here are some commonly asked questions about pet emergency care at KM Pets Hospital.

In contrast to more normal problems, a veterinary emergency is any condition in which your pet’s life is in risk. Shock, multiple seizures or other neurological crises, heat stroke, traumatic injuries, urinary or digestive obstructions, poison ingestion, and foreign object ingestion are all examples.
You have an emergency on your hands if your pet is straining to urinate, fainting, unable to stand, displaying sudden abdominal swelling, or having uncontrollable bleeding, vomiting, or diarrhoea. Other signs, such as shaking or avoiding human contact, may indicate an illness causing acute discomfort.
You can approach your injured pet safely, but only if you take the necessary precautions. Keep your hands away from the animal’s mouth and don’t grab or hug him. To keep him still, you may wrap him loosely with a blanket or towel. If your pet isn’t vomiting, muzzling him is a good precaution.
In rare cases, it may be prudent to administer some basic first aid while preparing your pet for our emergency veterinarian. Placement of cool, damp towels over a heat-stricken animal, removal of an object blocking the airway (either with your fingers or with a modified Heimlich technique), and application of pressure to a cut to stop or delay bleeding are examples of these steps.
While you definitely want to manage a veterinary emergency as soon as possible, there may be occasions when contacting KM Pets Emergency Help Line first makes sense. This not only allows us to train you on how to properly care for your pet, but it also gives us enough time to prepare for your pet’s arrival. If your pet consumed a poison, please inform us about it or bring a sample with you.
Our emergency veterinarian can conduct emergency internal or orthopaedic surgery, adjust body temperature, deliver medications to stop deadly convulsions or neutralise toxins, and much more.

If you have any other questions, please contact us

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