A calm dog looking at the camera, ready for veterinary care
Dog-led emergency guidance and vet-led recovery support

When your dog is not okay, start with the vet.

DogEmergency.org helps you recognize urgent warning signs, prepare for the clinic call, and understand vet-guided support products from Alfavet for digestion, appetite, recovery, and dogs that won't take tablets.

Built for dog owners across Hong Kong, Tokyo, Taipei, Singapore & Bangkok

5 marketsHK · Japan · Taiwan · Singapore · Thailand
Vet-reviewedDog emergency guidance
24-hourEmergency clinic routing
RegionalDog-care partner network

What is your dog doing that scares you?

Every path starts with veterinary assessment. The product suggestions below are support conversations to have with your vet, not instructions to manage an emergency at home.

Owner triage
Go now

Red flag emergency

  • Swollen hard belly with unproductive retching (bloat / GDV)
  • Breathing distress, collapse, or pale/blue gums
  • Chocolate, xylitol, grapes, rodenticide or medicine ingestion
  • Heatstroke, seizure, or road trauma
  • Heavy bleeding or a major fall
Find a 24h clinic
Digestive

Vomiting, diarrhea, gut upset

  • Acute diarrhea or repeated vomiting
  • After antibiotics or a diet change
  • Possible dehydration or appetite loss
  • Blood, or a swollen belly, needs urgent care
GI support shelf
Recovery

Not eating, weak, post-clinic

  • Poor appetite or food refusal
  • Post-surgery or illness recovery
  • Needs liquid calories or hydration support
  • Convalescence after a vet visit
Recovery support
Puppy & senior

Puppy & senior crises

  • Unvaccinated puppy with vomiting or diarrhea (parvo)
  • Toy-breed puppy weak or wobbly (low blood sugar)
  • Senior dog suddenly off food or collapsed
  • Needs a palatable, vet-led recovery format
Puppy emergencies

Priority guides for the moments dog owners panic-search.

Vet-reviewed guides selected for clinical urgency and owner search intent. Each one ends with the same rule: assess urgency first, then ask your veterinarian.

Priority

Alfavet support shelf for the recovery journey.

Our dog-led launch logic is simple: stabilize the emergency with a vet first, then support recovery — digestion, appetite, and convalescence — with the German vet-channel shelf that turns a clinic visit into a complete recovery plan.

Alfavet is a German veterinary animal-health company whose products are built for vet-practice use. On DogEmergency.org, its role is the German vet-channel support layer for digestion, appetite, and convalescence after a veterinarian has assessed the dog.

Vet-guided products
Alfavet DiaTab pack

DiaTab

Acute diarrhea support

Alfavet positions DiaTab as a plant-based dietary supplement for dogs and cats during and after acute diarrhea, combining pectins and natural binders to support digestion gently.

Diarrhea support Chewable Dog-led hero
The fast answer to acute diarrhea — firms stool and supports absorption during the upset and the days after.
Alfavet DiaTab PRO pack

DiaTab PRO / DiarPositiv PRO

Microbiome rebuild

Alfavet positions its PRO diarrhea line around pre- and probiotic support and physiological digestion, for longer administration to help rebuild intestinal flora after upset or antibiotics.

Microbiome Longer course Dog/cat shelf
The gut rebuild after diarrhea or antibiotics, when the goal is restoring balance rather than firming stool.
Alfavet ReConvales Tonicum Dog pack

ReConvales Tonicum Dog

Appetite, convalescence

Alfavet describes ReConvales Tonicum Dog for nutritional and physiological restoration and convalescence, with liquid nutrients positioned for recovery and underweight dogs.

Poor appetite Hydration support Recovery hero
The recovery hero: high-acceptance liquid nutrition that helps food-refusing dogs eat and rehydrate again.
Alfavet ReConvales Energy pack

ReConvales Energy

High-calorie recovery

Alfavet positions ReConvales Energy to be mixed with wet or dry food to encourage eating during convalescence, supplying concentrated energy when every calorie counts.

High calorie Clinic recovery Mix into food
The high-calorie bridge for serious cases — concentrated energy for dogs that need to regain condition.
Alfavet ReConvales Power pack

ReConvales Power

Vitamin & energy paste

Alfavet describes ReConvales Power as an energy-rich vitamin paste for dogs and cats with taurine, trace elements and minerals — a concentrated vitamin and energy supply without sugar or malt.

Vitamin paste Convalescence Easy to dose
Palatable paste support for picky or recovering dogs that need a vitamin and energy boost between meals.
+

Vet-channel shelf

Available through vets

Alfavet states its products are supplied through veterinary practices. DogEmergency.org routes owners to participating vets rather than presenting these as over-the-counter fixes for an emergency.

After assessment Vet-channel Recovery support
Every product here is recovery support used after a vet assesses your dog — never an emergency response.

Regional emergency scenarios we built for.

These are example clinic-call situations for the markets we serve. They show how the triage pages and recovery section should help an owner explain the case without pretending to be real testimonials.

Scenario cards
Hong Kong · large breed
Swollen belly, pacing, and repeated retching after dinner. The call summary should include breed, weight, timing, and whether anything comes up.
Scenario: possible GDV
Tokyo · first-time owner
Dog may have eaten sugar-free gum. The useful details are xylitol on the label, pieces missing, body weight, and the exact time found.
Scenario: xylitol exposure
Taipei · multi-dog home
One dog has vomiting and watery diarrhoea while another seems normal. The clinic needs food history, medications, blood, and hydration signs.
Scenario: acute GI upset
Singapore · senior dog
Older dog is weak, off food, and reluctant to stand. The call should mention gum colour, breathing, medications, water intake, and duration.
Scenario: collapse risk
Bangkok · expat owner
Dog is frantic after a hot walk. Start gentle cooling while calling, and tell the clinic about panting, gum colour, collapse, and temperature exposure.
Scenario: heatstroke concern
Hong Kong · puppy owner
Unvaccinated puppy has vomiting and bloody diarrhoea. The clinic needs age, vaccine status, appetite, energy, and stool description.
Scenario: parvo concern
Tokyo · post-surgery
Dog will not eat after surgery. The recovery page helps frame questions for the vet about nausea, pain, hydration, and palatable support.
Scenario: post-op appetite
Hong Kong · rescue dog
A nervous dog hides, trembles, and refuses food. The call prep keeps observations concrete instead of vague: timing, triggers, appetite, gums, and breathing.
Scenario: pain or shock screen
Tokyo · senior rescue
Senior dog is suddenly skipping meals. The guide separates mild appetite loss from red flags such as collapse, vomiting, swollen belly, and pale gums.
Scenario: appetite loss
Taipei · antibiotic aftercare
Loose stool after antibiotics. After the vet rules out danger signs, recovery questions can focus on diet transition and gut support.
Scenario: aftercare discussion
Singapore · heat scare
Hot weather plus brick-red gums and weakness should be described as an emergency, with cooling steps already started and travel time to clinic.
Scenario: hot-weather triage
Bangkok · clinic referral
When language or stress gets in the way, the summary gives the clinic clean details: signalment, signs, timing, possible toxin, and current location.
Scenario: call handoff

Reviewed by veterinarians, not marketers.

Every emergency guide and recovery recommendation is reviewed by the DogEmergency.org veterinary advisory board against AVMA, AAHA, and small-animal emergency-medicine standards.

AVMA · AAHA aligned
AS

Dr. Apinya Srisai

Veterinarian · DVM

Reviews emergency triage wording, escalation boundaries, and recovery support limits.

KW

Dr. Kenji Watanabe

Veterinarian · DVM, PhD

Reviews clinical sourcing, toxicology guidance, and owner communication.

SL

Dr. Sarah Lim

Veterinarian · BVMS

Reviews low-stress handling, recovery monitoring, and clinic handoff language.

WH

Dr. Wei-Chen Hsu

Veterinarian · DVM

Reviews emergency-care routing, triage clarity, and transport wording.

For veterinary partners

Built for veterinary partners across Asia.

DogEmergency.org is a consumer-first portal that sends worried dog owners straight to vet-led care. For clinics, it hosts your profile, your vet-reviewed emergency guidance, and symptom-based referral routing — with the Alfavet German vet-channel shelf as your built-in recovery aisle.

Host clinic profiles with species & emergency-readiness tags
Doctor-reviewed dog emergency guidance for your owners
Symptom-based referral routing by location, hours & type
Alfavet recovery shelf: digestion, appetite, and convalescence
For clinics · the terms, up front

No catch. List your clinic in minutes.

Free to list for launch partnersNo listing fee for clinics joining at launch.
No exclusivityStay listed in every directory and group you already use.
No obligation to stock AlfavetThe recovery shelf is optional. Your clinical judgement leads.
Owner leads sent to you directCall-prep summaries arrive by email or LINE, routed by location and symptom.
You control your profileEdit hours, services, and your own guidance any time.
You own your dataOwner contact details are shared only with the clinic they choose.

Make the clinic call easier.

Dog owners often lose time because they cannot describe the problem clearly. This intake surface turns panic into useful details for a veterinary team.

Vet routing

Find a 24h emergency clinic near you.

Type your city or district and we will show matching emergency hospitals from the list below.

Find care near you

Emergency hospitals across Asia.

Choose your city, find a hospital that can help with urgent dog symptoms, and use the call-prep form below so the team gets the important details fast.

10Bangkok clinics

Bangkok clinics

Hospitals that can help Bangkok dog owners move quickly from worry to a vet visit.
Source-linked

Emergency call prep

Fill these in before you call or message the clinic, then copy or share the summary through the contact channel the clinic provides.

Share summary via LINE
Can I use an Alfavet product instead of seeing a vet?

No. If your dog has emergency signs, call or visit a veterinarian. The products shown here are supportive options that may be recommended through veterinary practices after the vet assesses your dog.

Why is DogEmergency.org so focused on bloat, poisoning and the gut?

Bloat (GDV), poisoning, heatstroke and digestive crises are among the fastest-moving dog emergencies. They are also where a vet-led support journey can continue after stabilization: rehydration, appetite, and settling the gut.

Are recovery products appropriate during an emergency?

No. A dog with a swollen belly, collapse, breathing trouble or suspected poisoning needs emergency care now. Recovery support belongs in a veterinarian's plan after diagnosis, not as a home response to an emergency.

Where do pet owners get these products?

Alfavet states that its products are available through veterinary practices. DogEmergency.org routes owners to participating vets rather than presenting the products as casual over-the-counter fixes.

How is the guidance reviewed?

Every guide is reviewed by our veterinary advisory board against AVMA, AAHA, and small-animal emergency-medicine standards before publication. Partner clinics can also publish their own doctor-reviewed guidance under their profile.

Wherever you are in the moment, start here.

Three clear paths: act on an emergency, understand vet-recommended recovery support, or partner with us as a clinic.

Next step
For owners now

Check emergency signs.

Know in seconds whether this is a "go now," "call today," or "watch closely" moment.

Check signs
After the vet visit

Understand recovery support.

Make sense of the vet-recommended digestion, appetite and recovery products — after assessment.

See recovery shelf
For veterinarians

List your clinic for the regional launch.

Become a referral destination for worried dog owners and a vet-led recovery partner.

List your clinic

Clinical sources & standards

Emergency guidance follows AVMA, AAHA, and small-animal emergency-medicine standards and is reviewed by our veterinary advisory board. Recovery product information is based on Alfavet's German vet-channel product series.