Animal Emergency & Specialty

Animal Emergency & Specialty AES offers compassionate, 24-hour emergency & specialty vet care for your best friend!

AES is the premier, family-owned, 24-hour veterinary hospital on Seattle's Eastside. Our compassionate team utilizes the latest medical techniques in our beautiful, state-of-the-art facility to skillfully diagnose and treat your pet. AES is honored to be the preferred specialty care provider of many pet parents, family veterinarians, and animal welfare organizations. We take pride in offering the gold standard in patient care and client service.

Love wins, and diversity makes us stronger. Happy Pride Month, Friends! 🌈 ❤️
06/02/2026

Love wins, and diversity makes us stronger. Happy Pride Month, Friends! 🌈 ❤️

Wishing our kind, caring, and professional Client Care Team members a Happy Veterinary Receptionist Week! We appreciate ...
04/23/2026

Wishing our kind, caring, and professional Client Care Team members a Happy Veterinary Receptionist Week! We appreciate you!

“In a world where you can be anything, be kind.” - UnknownA big hug to all our vet med colleagues who work tirelessly to...
03/26/2026

“In a world where you can be anything, be kind.” - Unknown

A big hug to all our vet med colleagues who work tirelessly to help pets in need while navigating your own challenges. We see you, and we appreciate you! 💗💖

We also want to give a special shout-out to fellow independent hospital owners who strive to make ends meet while offering fair wages and benefits to employees, providing high-quality care to patients, and keeping fees affordable for clients in an increasingly competitive, corporatized field. We stand with you! 💞💓

Ellensburg Animal Hospital would like to address recent online commentary regarding our clinic, much of which has been unfair to our team, misleading to the public, and dismissive of the care, professionalism, and emotional labor that veterinary staff provide every day.

Veterinary medicine is one of the most emotionally demanding professions there is, and unless you’ve lived it, it’s hard to fully understand what happens behind the exam room door.

Every day, veterinary teams carry an enormous weight. We help families through some of their worst moments. We deliver hard news. We fight for sick and injured animals. We stay late, skip lunch, make difficult calls, and do everything we can to care for the pets entrusted to us.

And sometimes, we help a beloved pet pass peacefully… then, just a few minutes later, we are expected to walk into the next appointment with a smile on our face and carry on like our hearts aren’t cracked wide open.

That is the reality of this field.

Running a veterinary hospital is also incredibly expensive. The equipment, medications, lab work, staffing, training, supplies, utilities, emergency preparedness, and day-to-day care it takes to keep a hospital functioning are substantial. Veterinary medicine is not “just a quick visit” or “just a shot.” It is skilled medical care provided by a team of people who have spent years gaining education and experience who have dedicated their lives to serving animals.

And behind that team? We are still people.

We have families. We go home carrying the cases that stayed with us. We replay the appointments that hurt. We wonder if we could have done more. And yes, we read the reviews, the comments, the angry posts, and the public attacks.

Those words do not just “stay online.”

They land on real people. People who were likely doing their best in a hard moment. People who may have just helped a family say goodbye to a pet. People who may not have had time to process their own grief before moving on to the next patient who needed them.

Every cruel comment, every accusation, every public pile-on cuts deeper than most people realize.

This profession is already struggling under the weight of compassion fatigue, burnout, staffing shortages, financial pressure, and emotional exhaustion. Many veterinary professionals are giving everything they have, and still being told it isn’t enough.

Please remember: veterinary teams are not robots. We are not uncaring. We are not untouched by loss, grief, frustration, or heartbreak.

We care deeply. Sometimes too deeply. We will continue to work hard to care for your animals, advocate for them, and do our best to accommodate the needs of every patient we can.

But kindness matters.

Patience matters.

Grace matters.

Because the people caring for your pets are human, too.

🐾 Patient Spotlight: Meet Daisy! 🌼🌼🌼Daisy, a sweet 12-year-old Chihuahua, came into our hospital with an increased respi...
03/24/2026

🐾 Patient Spotlight: Meet Daisy! 🌼🌼🌼

Daisy, a sweet 12-year-old Chihuahua, came into our hospital with an increased respiratory rate and low energy. Our Emergency Team quickly assessed her condition and provided immediate care.

Upon examination, Daisy was found to have a heart murmur and required oxygen support in our specialized oxygen unit. With close monitoring, medications to assist her breathing, and diagnostic testing, our Team worked throughout the night to stabilize her condition.

Thanks to the dedicated care from our emergency doctors and staff, Daisy improved and was successfully weaned off oxygen. She is now back home with her family!

Daisy will be following up with a cardiologist for ongoing care, and we are so happy to have been part of her journey. 💖

🌼🌸🌼 Way to go, Daisy! 🌼🌸🌼

Spring is here, Friends! As temperatures rise, help your furry friends adjust gradually. Avoid intense exercise for flat...
03/23/2026

Spring is here, Friends! As temperatures rise, help your furry friends adjust gradually. Avoid intense exercise for flat-faced, extra fluffy, or senior pets. Stay safe and reach out if you need us! 🌸🌷🌼

Are you the Pug-fect forever home for this pair? 😍❤️😍
02/20/2026

Are you the Pug-fect forever home for this pair? 😍❤️😍

Two words that can feel like a big ask: Bonded pair.

But Kingston & Isla? They’re the kind that make you wonder why you’d ever want just one.

They’re 2-ish years old and absolutely charming. They sleep touching. They casually swap food bowls mid-meal like it’s part of a coordinated routine. Isla makes sure Kingston receives his daily face kisses — whether he asked for them or not.

They adore people. Farmers markets? They’re in. Meeting strangers? Happy to. They’ve done beautifully with their foster siblings and genuinely enjoy being part of a pack.

At home, they settle. They’re not chaotic. They’re cuddle-in, early-bedtime, old-soul-in-young-bodies kind of dogs.

Are they still learning? Of course. Potty training is improving. Car rides need practice. The stubborn pug streak runs strong.

But what stands out isn’t the work — it’s the way they move through life together. The quiet check-ins. The way they choose each other every single time.

We don’t know their past.
But we do know their future is going to be amazing.

And we know they’re going to make one very lucky home incredibly happy — with double the love, double the snuggles, and double the heart.

Currently fostered in Tacoma, WA.

The pug community has shown up before.
We believe you’ll show up again. PLEASE SHARE!

APPLY NOW!
https://evergreenpugrescue.com/dog/kingston/

Again, a HUGE thank you to Michele Weir Photography for the wonderful photos! Here's to hoping this pair gets lucky!

AES reopens at 8 am on Saturday. Happy Valentine’s Day, Friends! 💖💖💖
02/13/2026

AES reopens at 8 am on Saturday. Happy Valentine’s Day, Friends! 💖💖💖

GO, HAWKS! AES will reopen tomorrow at 8 am. 💙💚🏈💙💚
02/08/2026

GO, HAWKS! AES will reopen tomorrow at 8 am. 💙💚🏈💙💚

Lucy 💖💖💖
02/08/2026

Lucy 💖💖💖

Our dog team has asked us to share Lucy's plea again. We hope you will help us get the word out about her!

URGENT - PERMANENT ODH FOSTER HOME NEEDED:
(located in W. Washington state or Portland, OR only)

A reminder that because of donations, ALL VET BILLS are paid by Old Dog Haven!

"Lucy" is a beautiful, brindle Boston terrier/pug mix, spayed female, who weighs 20 pounds. This girl lost a longtime home where she socialized a great deal and was treasured, then the next person took her to a shelter.

She was diagnosed with diabetes (the reason for her needing to go out constantly and having accidents). She is now with temporary shelter fosters who say she is active, very loving, confident, a great walking companion. She's polite with the other dog and would enjoy living with another gentle dog (and sharing the humans' bed).

She is starting twice-daily insulin injections which hopefully will stabilize her and reduce the drinking/peeing. It does require meals at regular twice-daily times followed immediately by insulin, and will mean frequent vet visits for a while until she is regulated.

There may be complications over time and she may become blind. Yes, a big commitment! but a delightful dog that you'll love living with! If you are interested and able to handle her care, please let us know ASAP

If you would like to offer Lucy the forever home she needs, please read through the information on our website about forever fostering for Old Dog Haven and then email or applications manager for a foster application (we do not have an application online).

https://olddoghaven.org/how-to-help/fostering/

PLEASE NOTE: We respond to inquiries within 36 hours. If you haven't received an email please check your spam folder.

Jinx is a 9-month-old, spayed female Border Collie who was evaluated by Dr. Kelci McKeirnan, our board-certified veterin...
02/04/2026

Jinx is a 9-month-old, spayed female Border Collie who was evaluated by Dr. Kelci McKeirnan, our board-certified veterinary surgeon, after she developed front limb lameness following a jump over a gate. She showed noticeable reluctance to extend her right shoulder. Radiographs revealed no evidence of fractures, and her injury was suspected to be soft tissue-related.

Jinx was fitted with a Dog Leggs brace and was prescribed several weeks of strict rest. Although she recovered well, like many young, active dogs, she experienced some muscle loss during this rest period. Our rehabilitation team stepped in, using the underwater treadmill to provide controlled, low-impact exercise to safely rebuild her strength and muscle.

Jinx completed her final rehabilitation session and officially graduated! She is now cleared to begin training to herd sheep—an exciting next step for this intelligent and active girl. 🐾 🐑 🥰

Address

12305 120th Avenue NE Ste K
Kirkland, WA
98034

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Animal Emergency & Specialty posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category