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Specialty Center: Acupuncture
Susan Erika Argeres, DVM
Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist
Kimberly Freeman, DVM
Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist
With traditional Western medicine’s newfound recognition of the respect for the value of the Natural Arts of Healing for humans, there is a corresponding growth in recognition and acceptance of the value those ancient practices can bring to the health and well-being of the animals in our lives. Alternative approaches to veterinary medicine are rapidly gaining in reputation as owners discover that these practices can provide ways of bringing your pet to a more balanced state of health as well as relieving pain, discomfort and malaise. Balancing treatments such as acupuncture, massage and touch therapies help clear the blockage of blood and energy and allow your pet to feel good from the inside out.
Working with alternative techniques allows a veterinarian to get to know the owner and pet in a unique way. It is a firm belief that to share this incredible human-animal bond that inevitably results from these interactions is a unique and irreplaceable honor.
Benefits of Animal Alternatives are:
- Promote more balanced state of health
- Relieving pain, discomfort and malaise
- Clear the blockage of blood and energy to allow the animal to feel good.
- Improvements to musculoskeletal disorders such as hip dysplasia, arthritis and interverbral disc disease.
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