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Emergency Veterinary

Pet Emergency Treatment Services: Barlia Michael DVM

1048 University Ave, Berkeley, CA 94710, United States

4.2 (119 reviews)
Brand Pet Emergency
Property type Veterinarian ·  · 1048 University Ave

About this hospital

Pet Emergency Treatment Services: Barlia Michael DVM in Oakland

Pet Emergency Treatment Services: Barlia Michael DVM is an emergency veterinary option for people in Oakland, CA, with an address listed as 1048 University Ave in Berkeley. Public information also indicates it operates around the clock and provides a direct phone line for urgent questions. If you’re searching for an emergency vet, this listing fits the Emergency Veterinary category, which generally means the hospital is set up to handle time-sensitive needs rather than routine scheduling.

Oakland emergency vet context

In Oakland, emergency veterinary demand often shows up when timing matters: after-hours injuries, sudden illness, or worsening symptoms that can’t wait for a regular clinic appointment. Searches for an emergency vet may rise during evenings, weekends, and when weather or travel delays push owners into “next available” decisions. Even without knowing the specific case mix, emergency facilities in the area typically need to triage quickly, decide how urgent each patient is, and stabilize first while gathering more details from the owner.

The Pet Emergency network here

This listing is associated with the Pet Emergency brand. In practice, a network affiliation often means common intake expectations, referral habits, and operational routines that help keep patient flow predictable when demand is high. For an Oakland pet owner, choosing a Pet Emergency-affiliated location may simplify decision-making versus an independent emergency clinic, since you can expect brand-consistent processes for triage and communication. If you’re comparing options, it’s still a good idea to call and ask how they handle your specific concern.

Emergency-focused operating model

Emergency veterinary care is built around urgent triage rather than scheduled visits. Even when a hospital is open around the clock, your experience may follow a “first assess, then treat” pattern: staff typically evaluate how quickly a patient needs stabilization, pain control, or diagnostics. When to call versus when to come in depends on symptoms, but if you’re seeing trouble breathing, collapse, uncontrolled bleeding, or a major change in behavior, calling immediately or heading in quickly is usually the safest path. Use the phone line listed publicly to confirm intake steps.

Guest/patient reception signals

This hospital listing shows a public rating of 4.2 across 119 reviews. In that range, ratings commonly reflect a mix of smooth and not-so-smooth experiences rather than perfect consistency. Owners often judge front-desk responsiveness, clarity of communication, and whether costs and next steps feel understandable. A band like this can be useful as a signal of general steadiness, but it doesn’t tell you how a specific critical case will be handled, so calling with your pet’s situation remains important.

Before visiting: practical notes

Before you go, call using the number listed publicly to confirm they can take your case and to ask about any intake steps. Bring any medical records you have, including discharge papers, vaccination history, and a list of current medications with dosages. If you have prior test results or photos of symptoms, it can help to have them ready to describe. Finally, be prepared to discuss payment options and timelines for diagnostics and treatment at the front desk.

Location

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Contact & Links

Editor’s note

Useful when the case fits the Pet Emergency network's documented scope at this location 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.

Is Pet Emergency Treatment Services: Barlia Michael DVM part of a network?

Yes — this location operates as part of the Pet Emergency veterinary network. Service mix and referral protocols typically follow Pet Emergency's standards across locations.

What other emergency vets are in Oakland?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026