Showing 81-84 of 84 clinics
Cara Veterinary Hospital is part of the independent Cara Veterinary Group (the website describes 30 years’ practice experience). Based on the clinic’s own service list and the latest reviews, it appears set up for both routine preventative care and more involved work-ups (in-house lab, imaging and surgery), with a notable focus on pet travel documentation. Reviewers repeatedly describe staff giving step-by-step guidance for pet passports and handling complex overseas moves (including working across time zones), and one review specifically mentions a vet taking time to explain a pet’s condition in clear detail. There is also at least one warning-style 1‑star review without details, which conflicts with many positive accounts.
Cara Veterinary Hospital is part of the independent Cara Veterinary Group (the website describes 30 years’ practice experience). Based on the clinic’s own service list and the latest reviews, it appears set up for both routine preventative care and more involved work-ups (in-house lab, imaging and surgery), with a notable focus on pet travel documentation. Reviewers repeatedly describe staff giving step-by-step guidance for pet passports and handling complex overseas moves (including working across time zones), and one review specifically mentions a vet taking time to explain a pet’s condition in clear detail. There is also at least one warning-style 1‑star review without details, which conflicts with many positive accounts.
NOAH is repeatedly described in reviews as a referral-style clinic for complex orthopaedic and neurological cases, including advanced diagnostics and surgery. Owners mention cruciate ligament operations, spinal surgery, and an MRI arranged quickly as part of a neurological work-up, with several reviews emphasising clear explanations and recovery support after major procedures. One review, however, reports a poor long-term outcome after cruciate surgery and complaints about post-op communication, so experiences appear mixed depending on the case and clinician. Concrete specifics mentioned by reviewers include: - Cruciate ligament surgery (including “complicated” cruciate injuries) with reports of dogs returning to running. - Spinal surgery for a cat, with “walked me through everything” and strong recovery support. - Neurological consultation with an MRI scan scheduled quickly and “answers fast”. - Elbow dysplasia treated with a total elbow replacement.
NOAH is repeatedly described in reviews as a referral-style clinic for complex orthopaedic and neurological cases, including advanced diagnostics and surgery. Owners mention cruciate ligament operations, spinal surgery, and an MRI arranged quickly as part of a neurological work-up, with several reviews emphasising clear explanations and recovery support after major procedures. One review, however, reports a poor long-term outcome after cruciate surgery and complaints about post-op communication, so experiences appear mixed depending on the case and clinician. Concrete specifics mentioned by reviewers include: - Cruciate ligament surgery (including “complicated” cruciate injuries) with reports of dogs returning to running. - Spinal surgery for a cat, with “walked me through everything” and strong recovery support. - Neurological consultation with an MRI scan scheduled quickly and “answers fast”. - Elbow dysplasia treated with a total elbow replacement.
Only the clinic name (“Acuvet Ireland”) was provided in the inputs. No verified information was included about whether it is independent or part of a larger group, what services are offered, who the clinicians are, pricing, facilities, or client reviews/ratings—so those details can’t be summarised accurately from the available sources.
Only the clinic name (“Acuvet Ireland”) was provided in the inputs. No verified information was included about whether it is independent or part of a larger group, what services are offered, who the clinicians are, pricing, facilities, or client reviews/ratings—so those details can’t be summarised accurately from the available sources.
Vets Direct is a veterinary clinic, but the information provided here doesn’t include details on its facilities, whether it’s independent or part of a corporate group, what services it offers, pricing, named clinicians, or any Google rating/review excerpts. Without a website summary or review content, it isn’t possible to describe what the clinic is set up for (for example, routine preventative care vs. surgery/dentistry, urgent cases, or home visits) based on evidence.
Vets Direct is a veterinary clinic, but the information provided here doesn’t include details on its facilities, whether it’s independent or part of a corporate group, what services it offers, pricing, named clinicians, or any Google rating/review excerpts. Without a website summary or review content, it isn’t possible to describe what the clinic is set up for (for example, routine preventative care vs. surgery/dentistry, urgent cases, or home visits) based on evidence.
