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Pharmacy

Get your pet's medications, food, and preventives delivered straight to your door—fast and easy.

Pharmacy Home Delivery: Your Pet’s Prescriptions, Delivered to Your Door

Busy schedule? No problem. With our pharmacy home delivery service, you can get your pet’s medications, preventives, and prescription diets shipped directly to your doorstep—safe, fast, and easy.

What’s Available for Delivery?

Through our trusted online pharmacy partner, you can order:

  • Flea, tick, and heartworm preventives

  • Allergy and chronic condition meds

  • Pain management prescriptions

  • Prescription food and treats

  • Supplements and wellness products

All products are vet-approved and sourced from trusted manufacturers—so you’ll never receive expired or questionable items.

Why Choose Our Home Delivery Option?

With our home delivery platform, you get:

  • Convenience – order from anywhere, anytime

  • Automatic refills – never miss a dose

  • Product safety – guaranteed storage and shipping standards

  • Real-time coordination with your pet’s medical records

  • Specialty options for pets with unique prescription needs

You also have access to support from our veterinary team for any questions or changes in your pet’s treatment plan.

How It Works

  1. Visit our online pharmacy portal or call us to request a prescription.

  2. Select your product, quantity, and shipping schedule.

  3. We’ll approve and process your prescription directly.

  4. Your order ships straight to your home within 5–7 business days.

You’ll also get reminders when it’s time to reorder or schedule your pet’s next exam. An auto-refill option is also available, so you never run out.


Home delivery makes managing your pet’s health simple, seamless, and secure—so you can spend less time at the store and more time with your pet.

🐾 Looking to keep your pet healthy and happy? Visit us—we’re here to support every step of the way.

FAQs

Answers to Common Questions

Harbor View Veterinary Hospital keeps track of your pet's weight just like your doctor's office keeps track of your height and weight each time you visit. Having an accurate and current measurement of your pet's weight will help us ensure that we prescribe the right dose of preventives, medications, and any needed anesthetics. It can also help us notice any early clues to health concerns. In addition, a regular weigh-in can help you track and manage your pet's weight.

Call us. Just like doctors, veterinarians sometimes need to try more than one treatment/medication to find the correct solution to cure or manage a pet's condition. Please let us know if something we recommended or prescribed isn't helping. We want to work with you to find the right answers for your pet.

Veterinarians can't diagnose over the phone. Besides being unethical and illegal, diagnosing by phone doesn't allow veterinarians to physically examine a pet. A physical exam is necessary so your veterinarian can provide an accurate diagnosis and proper treatment. Treating a pet for the wrong disease or condition will cost more in the end and could be harmful or even deadly to your pet.

Spaying and neutering can have major benefits for your pet, including lowering or preventing the risk of several diseases and types of cancer. Your veterinarian will be happy to discuss these benefits. In addition, spaying and neutering helps control the pet population by reducing the number of unwanted pets. Spaying and neutering are surgical procedures that require your pet to be put under anesthesia. The cost of these procedures takes into account the anesthesia, your veterinary team's time and expertise, monitoring, drapes, suture material, and hospitalization. Spaying or neutering your pet is much less expensive than feeding and caring for litters of unwanted puppies or kittens or dealing with potential pregnancy complications.

Your veterinarian will determine which vaccinations are appropriate for your dog or cat, based on individual factors, such as lifestyle and health status. Veterinarians commonly recommend that dogs be vaccinated against rabies, distemper, Lyme, and Leptospirosis parvovirus and that cats be vaccinated against rabies and panleukopenia (feline distemper). Additional vaccines, such as feline leukemia virus (FeLV), feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and Bordetella (kennel cough), Lyme, and Leptospirosis are recommended based on your cat or dog's risk. Many of these diseases can be fatal to your pet. Preventing them is far easier and less expensive than treatment. If you would like more information on vaccines, ask your veterinarian.

For the safety and protection of all clients, patients, and veterinary team members, we require all pets to be on a leash or in a carrier when they arrive at our hospital. They must continue to be restrained while they are in the reception area and while traveling to and from the exam rooms. Your veterinarian or veterinary technician will let you know when it's OK to let your pet off leash or out of his or her carrier. There is often a lot going on at our hospital. Combine that with unfamiliar surroundings and new animals, and any pet-even one that is well trained-might become uneasy or overly excited. We want you and your pet to have as pleasant an experience as possible every time you visit our hospital, so we ask all our clients to respect our policy.