Vet brings the office to the pet

Richard Goldstein”™s business is of the mobile kind ”“ only without the iGadgets and the apps.

Instead, the 20-year veterinarian operates his practice out of a 26-foot-long vehicle designed by La Boit Inc. in Columbus, Ohio, a manufacturer of mobile medical, dental and veterinary clinics.

The New Rochelle resident crossed paths with La Boit at a trade show and called it his “light bulb moment.”

“I thought it was something people would respond to,” he said.

For starters, the fact that “dogs and cats hate the car” ”“ especially en route to the vet ”“ is “universal.”

“They”™re miserable the minute they see what they”™re getting into,” Goldstein said. “Our target is people who have busy schedules who can”™t necessarily get to the vet during the day, stay-at-home parents who don”™t want to pack up the kids and the dog and go to the vet and seniors who can”™t get to the vet because they don”™t have transportation.”

Goldstein also works with animal shelters and rescue organizations since “those animals are already under a lot of stress already.”

The mobile veterinary clinic comes fully equipped with the standard equipment you”™d expect from a traditional operation.

Goldstein said there is a fully functional surgical suite and digital X-ray machine.

“I can do pretty much everything I can do in a stationary office,” he said.

Referrals would be made in an instance where “a critical case or intensive care” is involved.

According to the La Boit website, a full-service mobile vet clinic built on a Ford E-450 frame ranges in price from $1,700 to $3,000 per month when a seven-year finance plan is used.

So far, Goldstein”™s business has picked up every week since the spring launch of the Mobile Vet Squad.
“I think Westchester just fits the demographic,” Goldstein said. “People are busy here. A lot are on the go with commuting.”

As for adding vehicles and expanding his tri-state reach, “we get a lot of referrals. When people are walking down the street and they see a giant cat and dog on the side (of the truck) they wonder what it is.”