Patients treated this year
Owner satisfaction rate
Board-certified specialists on staff
Triage Veterinary Specialists — twenty-three years serving South Austin. Emergency, surgery, dentistry, and internal medicine under one roof, every hour of every day.
Call Now — Open 24/7Average emergency triage time
Measured across 4,200+ emergency visits in 2025
The first eight minutes decide everything.
When a dog seizes or a cat goes into respiratory distress, every second of delayed assessment changes the outcome. Our emergency floor runs a two-triage-nurse protocol — one clinician on intake, one on vitals — so no animal waits in a carrier while paperwork happens. The eight-minute average is not a marketing figure; it is the median from our electronic medical record, audited quarterly.

Soft-tissue surgical success rate
Across 1,840 procedures — internal audit, 2024–2025
Precision that comes from doing this every single day.
Our surgical suite runs seven days a week. Foreign body removals, tumor resections, gastropexy, orthopedic repair — our board-certified surgeons perform roughly 35 procedures per week, which means the hands operating on your pet have done this exact procedure hundreds of times before. Repetition is not routine; it is the mechanism of mastery.
Dental procedures performed annually
Including digital dental radiography on every patient
Oral disease is the most under-treated condition in pets.
Eighty percent of dogs and seventy percent of cats show signs of periodontal disease by age three. Left untreated, the infection travels — kidneys, heart, liver. Every Triage dental patient receives full-mouth digital radiographs before any extraction decision is made. We do not guess at root structure. We see it.

Managing complex chronic cases in Austin
Diabetic regulation, Cushing's, IBD, cardiac disease
The retired man drives forty minutes. We know why.
Managing a diabetic cat's insulin curve requires more than a prescription. It requires a doctor who remembers what the curve looked like six months ago, who notices the subtle weight shift before the owner does, and who calls the next morning after a glucose check — not because it is protocol but because they are curious about that specific animal. That is the practice we have built over two decades.
Board-certified.
Not just experienced.
Board certification requires residency training, peer-reviewed case logs, and a passing score on a national examination. It is the highest credential in veterinary specialty medicine.
Dr. Margaret Osei
Emergency & Critical Care
Dr. James Harrington
Soft Tissue Surgery
Dr. Priya Anand
Internal Medicine
Dr. Carlos Vega
Veterinary Dentistry
Dr. Susan Cho
Cardiology
Dr. Thomas Birch
Orthopedic Surgery
Dr. Amara Okonkwo
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Additional specialists across radiology, oncology, ophthalmology & exotic animal medicine
Specific cases.
Real outcomes.
Owner satisfaction
2025 annual survey, n=1,847
"Our golden retriever Biscuit swallowed a corn cob at 11 PM on a Sunday. We were in the parking lot by 11:22 and a surgeon had already reviewed the X-ray by the time we finished check-in paperwork. He was home the next afternoon."
Meredith & Jake Calloway
South Austin
Biscuit
Golden Retriever, 4 yrs
"I have driven forty-one minutes each way for three years because Dr. Anand is the only internist who has actually stabilized my cat's insulin regulation. Two other clinics gave me the same protocol that kept failing. She changed one thing and it worked."
Robert Stanhope
Buda, TX
Margaux
Domestic Shorthair, 12 yrs
"My terrier mix had a grade IV mast cell tumor on her leg. Dr. Harrington was direct about the margins, the prognosis, and the options — no false optimism, no panic. That clarity helped me make the right decision for her. She is eighteen months out and clear."
Diana Okafor
Cedar Park, TX
Remy
Rat Terrier Mix, 9 yrs
Medicine practiced
beyond the exam room.
Every year we donate surgical and medical services to Austin-area rescue organizations — not because it is good marketing, but because the animals who pass through rescue systems deserve the same standard of care as any pet with a home. We track these numbers the same way we track clinical outcomes: with precision and without sentimentality.
— Dr. Margaret Osei, Emergency & Critical Care
The New Pet
Parent Guide.
Forty pages written by our board-certified specialists — what to watch for in the first year, when a symptom is an emergency and when it is not, how to read a vaccine schedule, and what questions to ask your vet that most people never think to ask.
You have already read these numbers:
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