

Drop off was horribly managed and that was why I never wanted to see this place again. She tried shoving MY review in our faces like I didn't know what was said. She tried saying I said I didn't trust the vets, I did not say that. I never said anything about the vet capabilities, only how drop off was handled. You do not treat people this way no matter if there's a review or not.

That manager has now made it worse, I have a right to leave a review. Never once did she try to talk to us to see why we felt that way just decided to be an all out jerk. When we said this isn't how you conduct business and talk to people she responded with "yes mame it is." And gave us a thumbs up. I can honestly say her sarcasm and attitude made the whole situation worse. This woman was VERY confrontational, I have evidence of her horrible attitude. Wendy is a sarcastic horrible woman, that tried putting words in my mouth. In fact if I never see this building again it would be too soon. This was my first and last visit, its been extremely stressful, I hate this place, if they weren't one of the places taking the spay and neuter voucher I wouldn't be here right now. Oh and good luck getting someone on the phone they never answer. They don't know what they're doing, won't be clear on what needs to happen and need to pick one person to run the front outside instead of multiple people that are telling me multiple things. When you ask why you're being instructed multiple things they just act like you don't know what you're talking about. Stay in the car, don't stay in the car, but There's people coming and going so I'm not sure why I have to do this.
HARMONY VET CARE BRANDON REVIEWS HOW TO
Go look at Google AND yelp reviews first! There's 3 people outside, all 3 are giving different information on how to hand off these cats for spaying. If I can get a sick or injured dog, get it on my table, fix it and send it home to a loving family, that's the best day.First off, I don't recommend. We opened our second location a year ago, and it's already fully booked, and we need a third," Sabshin said. Her model is catching on, and she says she is busier than ever. Sabshin says the pandemic created so many hardships for so many people she doesn't want to see animals lose out on medical care because their owners can't afford it. I haven't had a job since I got laid off in PA in November with COVID and I'm down here trying to find a job now." "It's more affordable, especially with I'm unemployed. We caught up with Yerkey as he dropped off his dog Lambert for surgery. "Spay and neuter on two dogs for $200 that's a great price," Brett Yerkey said.

We are here to bridge that gap to make sure these animals are able to receive the medical care that they need." Not everyone can afford a $1,000 spay, and it doesn't mean that animals should go without that medical care. I just hope that they see there are resources for them. "I've seen them go up to $1,000 for a spay. "Spays right now run from $50 to $140," Sabshin said. Sabshin says their prices are competitive. Neuter takes about seven minutes to complete, while a spay is a little more complicated, taking about 15 minutes. In another room, the doctor was ready to receive. In one room, techs prepped the animals for surgery. We got to the clinic located at 5420 Webb Rd in Tampa at dawn to watch the show. "It is controlled chaos, but the key to that is to have enough staff so that we can control the chaos, and really like I said, the best thing to do is to maximize our efficiency, so getting everyone in within an hour is the best way to start our day," Sabshin said. Others stopped in the middle of the sidewalk when mother nature called to relieve themselves. Some dogs were barking and pulling away to avoid going into the waiting room, while cute, shy puppies were apprehensive taking their first steps in the parking lot. All of the animals slated for surgery are dropped off between 7 a.m.

We have exams we have one to two exam doctors going on, and they are doing 20 to 30 appointments a day."ĭuring the pandemic, Sabshin says they shifted all of their services to curbside. "Sometimes we have two doctors doing surgery so we can have 60 surgery patients in at one time, and that's still the surgery side. "We created Harmony Vet Care so we could maximize efficiency so that we can minimize cost," Sabshin said. Sabshin says she operates the non-profit to streamline its processes to perform exams and surgeries on pets using an assembly line technic that would make Henry Ford jealous. Stephanie Sabshin, wanted to open an affordable veterinarian clinic for everyone. In 2018, the founder of Harmony Vet Care, Dr.
