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Chamnan Akson Alley, 10400, Krung Thep Maha Nakhon, TH Thailand
kontakter telefon: +66 2 619 5782
internet side: www.phyathai7pet.com
Større kort og retningerLatitude: 13.7851192, Longitude: 100.5446741
Umaporn Pantasiraroj
::Love the service and best location
Nalin Chaminda Wickramarachchi
::Good taking care
Artist Mouth
::nice place clean fr9endly staff
Arkorn Soikaew
::They do tender animals with true heart. Staffs are nice and the vet doctor are very good. They are skilled, well-thought, professional, and true god for your pets. PS they are open 24/7 and always have doctors on standby so you will get the best out of it here. Well done
Charles Brahmawong
::I would never recommend Phyathai 7 Animal Hospital. If you love your cat, and are considering taking your cat here, this is important to read even though it's a long review: We brought our newly adopted kitten, Milo, in for vaccination shots in the late evening of February 7th, 2017. Our tiny kitten's first experience with the veterinarian [aside from having a seriously uncomfortable experience with a thermometer shoved up his rear-side] was being diagnosed with "Had Maew". Feline Panleukopenia Virus (information available on Wikipedia). They had given Milo a quick test of his diarrhea and pronounced him positive for the virus. They shaved his front leg and inserted a needle that caused Milo great discomfort given his small size. The doctor prescribed keeping him for 7 days (at a rate of 1,000 THB per day, inclusive) with an initial cost of 2,000 THB maximum. The veterinarian said Milo had a 50/50 chance of survival. This is important to note because after research online later showed, no one says "50%" anywhere when describing Feline Panleukopenia Virus--ESPECIALLY for a kitten (kittens have a 5-10% chance of survival.) After taking blood, which was painful to watch, and giving him an IV, they put him in a cage, which they then put above 2 other cats that the doctor said also had FPV/"Had Maew". "A cat diagnosed with FPV should be first of all kept in isolation." -- wikipedia If the other two cats did have FPV, and Milo did not (because no blood test had been completed yet), why would you expose him to TWO cats with FPV? Why no quarantine? Based on the doctor's diagnosis and strongly insisting Milo had FPV, we reluctantly agreed to leave Milo in their care that night. The very next morning, we called the pet store owner we got Milo from. The store owner was adamant that Milo was fine, asked us to bring him to her for care, and guaranteed he would recover quickly based on her 25 years of experience. So, we returned to Phyathai 7 to retrieve Milo that same day. The active veterinarian there tried to talk us out of checking Milo out, and cited a blood test (document available) showing that Milo's white blood cell count was low (yet not below the minimum). This is also important to note because the blood test does not appear to actually test for Feline Panleukopenia Virus itself. Why would you not test for the thing you're going to treat? We took Milo back to the pet store owner. We left Milo in her care for 7 days, but apparently, she only needed 2 days. His diarrhea, presumably stress induced, was gone. The store owner only treated him for diarrhea. She didn't charge us anything for Milo's care, and kept Milo fed and happy until we could return for him. It has now been 8 days since we took Milo out of Phyathai 7. The doctor [on the night of admission] had said Milo had already had "Had Maew" for a week already. "Feline panleukopenia requires aggressive treatment if the cat is to survive, as this disease can kill cats in less than 24 hours." -- wikipedia Today, Milo is still active and playful. He eats A LOT. And his poop is normal. Phyathai 7 charged us almost 4,000 THB by the time we got Milo out of there. ONE NIGHT. Had we kept him there for 7 days, the cost would have been unimaginable--with no guarantee Milo would still be alive. *All documents, including a picture of Milo now, available upon request. UPDATE: I started doing online research into the test they gave Milo that triggered their diagnosis of FPV. This is the basis for their claim that Milo definitely had FPV. The test they gave Milo is for "CPV Ag." Canine Parvovirus Antigen. It's meant for dogs. The viruses are related, but different. Still, I researched further into the CPV antigen test and found that the test they gave Milo was NEGATIVE. I have uploaded the image to prove it. So, either PhyaThai 7 completely LIED to us, or, they are severely stupid and too incompetent to be working on anyone's pets. Personally, I think both. They ripped us off and put our kitten at risk.