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Emergency Veterinary

Cascade Veterinary Referral Center

11140 SW 68th Pkwy, Tigard, OR 97223, United States

4.3 (529 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Veterinarian ·  · 11140 SW 68th Pkwy

About this hospital

Cascade Veterinary Referral Center in Tigard/Portland

Cascade Veterinary Referral Center is an emergency veterinary hospital serving the Portland, OR area. Public information lists it as open around the clock and provides a direct phone line at (971) 478-1295. For pet owners, that “24-hour” detail matters when you’re facing urgent symptoms and need a place that handles emergencies rather than routine appointments. The hospital address is 11140 SW 68th Pkwy, Tigard.

Portland emergency vet context

In Portland, emergency veterinary care often comes into play when symptoms can’t wait for the next day’s schedule—things like breathing trouble, uncontrolled bleeding, repeated vomiting, sudden weakness, or suspected toxin exposure. Demand can show up across neighborhoods at all hours, since pets and people don’t follow business timing. A referral-style emergency setting may also attract cases that need extra diagnostics or more advanced stabilization before treatment continues. If you’re unsure, calling first can help you decide on timing and next steps.

Independent-practice angle

Cascade Veterinary Referral Center is listed as an independent facility. Compared with chain-owned models, independent emergency hospitals may be more locally rooted in how they staff and how they coordinate care day to day. The overall scope can be more variable depending on the team on shift and what services are available in-house. That doesn’t automatically mean “more” or “less” capability—rather, it means the best approach is to ask what they can handle for your specific case and what a referral would look like, if needed.

Emergency-focused operating model

Emergency veterinary hospitals run on a triage approach: they assess patients by urgency, not order of arrival. With around-the-clock access listed in public sources, the process typically starts with a quick intake, followed by prioritization based on breathing, bleeding, consciousness, pain level, and overall stability. If you call before you drive in, you can ask whether they want you to come immediately, what to watch for en route, and how to describe symptoms clearly. For life-threatening signs, plan to arrive right away.

Reception signal: public rating

The hospital shows a public rating of 4.3 across 529 reviews. For many pet owners, a rating in this range can signal a generally consistent experience with front-desk handling, communication, and how the facility manages the practical side of emergencies. It can also suggest that most customers feel they received value for what was available at the time of visit. Ratings at this level don’t replace calling for specifics, especially for after-hours and complex cases.

Reviewer pattern and what to take from it

With 529 public reviews, you have more information to compare than you would from a small number of posts. That larger volume can help travelers and local pet owners spot patterns in how people describe check-in, wait times, and the clarity of updates. It’s still wise to treat reviews as one piece of your research—your pet’s condition, what was available that night, and the staffing on shift can shape the experience.

Before visiting: a quick checklist

Before you go to 11140 SW 68th Pkwy, consider calling Cascade Veterinary Referral Center first to confirm they’re ready for your type of emergency. Gather any prior medical records, vaccine history, medication lists, and details about possible exposures (plants, chemicals, foods, or medications). If you can, bring a leash or carrier, and be ready with payment information discussed by the hospital at intake. For fast changes, be prepared to describe symptoms and timing clearly.

Location

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Contact & Links

Editor’s note

Useful when an independently-operated emergency hospital fits the case better than a chain and the hospital's typical hours align with the situation. Confirm by phone for time-sensitive cases.

Common questions

Should I call ahead before bringing my pet?

Yes — calling first lets the team confirm a veterinarian is on-site, that the case fits the hospital's scope, and that walk-ins are being accepted at that hour. A 60-second call can avoid a wasted drive.

What other emergency vets are in Portland?

Our directory lists additional emergency veterinary hospitals serving Portland. Use the "Other emergency vets" link in the sidebar to see the full city listing.

Listing reviewed: May 2026