AMBULANCE
A one-stop solution when you are too sick to wait for a doctor’s appointment but are not facing a life threatening situation
A one-stop solution for immediate health care needs focused on getting patients seen, stabilized, or remedied as quickly as possible, but without rushing care. You don’t need to book a prior appointment. In urgent care, patients who come to us are not facing a life-threatening emergency requiring a hospital. If a patient arrives needing hospital services, we will transport them to a hospital by ambulance. Urgent care patients are typically those who are feeling sick or injured and cannot wait for an appointment with their doctor. Treatments are for minor injuries and illnesses and include injections, breathing treatments, lab tests, and imaging such as x-rays. This will operate 24/7.
WE DO NOT TAKE EMERGENCY CASES. If you have chest pain or pressure or think you may have suffered a stroke or other life-threatening situation, please call an ambulance at 127.
What does a stroke look like? Recognize the signs of a stroke. Remember FAST:
If you face a clinical situation that is not life-threatening but you cannot wait for the office to open in the morning, please contact our Urgent Care Center.
Areas of intervention
- Injuries such as cuts, fractures, sprains, animal bites, wound care, etc.
- Acute Illnesses such as colds, flus, infections, UTIs, etc.
- Injections
- Immunizations
Services offered
- Call Center 24/7 (on-call clinician for triage)
- Walk-in service 24/7
- Physician Consults & Exams
- General screenings
- Diagnostics such as labs & imaging
- First-aid
Our Doctors
Medical Facts
FAQ
- When someone has difficulty breathing,
- Someone has chest pain that can feel like a 'heaviness' or a 'tightness' in the chest
- Someone faints or is unconscious
- Someone may be having a stroke (they may suddenly become weak, their vision changes, they are dizzy or have difficulty speaking)
- Someone has severe pain everywhere
- Someone has bleeding that does not stop
- There was a car accident and people were injured.
- In general, you do not feel well, but you do not have any of the reasons mentioned above.
- Minor injuries such as sprains or small cuts – provided they are not bleeding uncontrollably.
- Small burns – burns that are smaller than twice the size of your hand.
- Cough or cold, but you are active if you eat well
- Dress your child in light clothing,
- Cover them with a light sheet or blanket while they sleep.
- Give extra fluids.
- If the temperature is >38 degrees Celsius, you can give medicines that lower the temperature. For their correct selection and use, you should consult the nurse or the family doctor.