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Singapore East Cat Emergency Vet

Short answer

For a cat emergency in Singapore East, call before traveling. If a nearby east-side clinic cannot receive your cat immediately, ask whether to go directly to a 24/7 emergency hospital.

Go to a vet now if

  • Open-mouth breathing, blue/pale gums, collapse, or severe weakness
  • Straining with little or no urine, repeated litter box trips, or painful crying
  • Lily, paracetamol/acetaminophen, pesticide, rodenticide, or unknown toxin exposure
  • Seizure, heatstroke, trauma, repeated vomiting, bloody diarrhea, or severe pain

What to say when calling

“My cat is in Singapore East. Main sign: __. Started: __. Age/weight: __. Eating/drinking: __. Urine/stool: __. Possible toxin/trauma/medications: __. Can you receive my cat now?”

Clinic options to verify before travel

Clinic hours, intake status, doctors on site, and emergency capacity can change. Call before traveling and use these listings as routing aids, not endorsements.

Advanced VetCare Bedok

Area: Bedok / East Singapore

Hours/status: Official site identifies Bedok as a 24-hour vet clinic

Phone: Check official site before travel

Address: Bedok, Singapore

East-side 24-hour vet clinic reference.

Verify on source page

VES Hospital @ Whitley

Area: Whitley / Novena

Hours/status: Official site says emergency service is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year

Phone: +65 6266 0232

Address: 232 Whitley Road, Singapore 297824

Use if the nearest east-side option cannot receive an emergency immediately.

Verify on source page

Beecroft Animal Specialist & Emergency Hospital

Area: Central / Alexandra area

Hours/status: Official site lists 24-hour emergency phone

Phone: +65 6996 1812

Address: Check official site before travel

Emergency hospital option; call to confirm route and intake.

Verify on source page

Language-ready symptom summary

Preferred languages: English.

Copy this into a message: “Cat emergency. Location: Singapore East. Symptom: __. Start time: __. Last ate/drank: __. Last urinated/defecated: __. Possible toxin/medicine/plant/trauma: __. Existing disease/medication: __.”

What to tell the vet

  • Age, weight, sex, and neuter status
  • Symptom start time and what changed
  • Eating, drinking, urination, defecation, vomiting, breathing, gum color, and pain signs
  • Photos, medication packaging, plant labels, discharge papers, or videos if safe
  • Current medications, supplements, and known diagnoses

List your clinic

Clinics can request listing updates by providing verified hours, emergency services, cat-handling capability, phone, location, language support, and official source URL.

Sources