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Dog

Cat

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.

Stone House Animal Hospital FAQs

There is no question too big or too small for our veterinary team.

Yes. Dog fight wounds can look minor, but the damage is often hidden. Imagine your shirt is your dog's skin. Pinch a small section of your shirt and pull it away from you. If this was your dog's skin, the entire area of your shirt that lifted away from you is the tissue that actually pulled loose under the skin. Damage like this may not heal on its own. There may be only a small mark (like where your fingers were), but the damage can be quite extensive underneath. Finding this before further problems occur is best for your pet and less expensive for you! You can contact Stone House Animal Hospital for such concerns.

There are several indicators of pain: hiding, not playing like usual, crying, biting, sad look in their eyes, doesn't want to get up. It is in a pet's nature to hide its pain, so by the time you start seeing any of these indicators, they really don't feel well and need to see a veterinarian. You can call Stone House Animal Hospital if you have such concerns.

No. These medications are not safe for pets. If you feel your pet would benefit from pain relief, please come see Stone House Animal Hospital. There are a lot of pain medications for our doctors to choose from so that your pet can feel better quickly- without the negative side effects of human pain relievers.

Females are spayed, and males are neutered. Both surgeries are done to keep pets from having babies. This not only helps to limit pet overpopulation but there are significant health advantages as well as potential behavioral advantages to both. You can contact Stone House Animal Hospital if you would like to know more.

Often this is an indication that their anal glands need to be expressed. Anal glands can become infected, impacted, and in some cases, can rupture. Some dogs need to have this procedure done frequently. Others don't. You can contact Stone House Animal Hospital if you have such concerns.

As a general rule from Stone House Animal Hospital, anything rich or fatty can cause trouble, so it's best to just feed pet food. Be sure to stay away from grapes, raisins, onions, chocolate, sugar-free gum, and anything with caffeine. These can be toxic.