Dedicated pet owners choose Natural Animal Clinic for safe, natural, and effective healing.
Book your appointment today!
Dedicated pet owners choose Natural Animal Clinic for safe, natural, and effective healing.
Book your appointment today!
Holistic & Integrative Pet Care
At Natural Animal Clinic, we blend holistic and traditional medicine to treat root causes, not just symptoms. Our natural, non-invasive approach promotes lasting health, helping your pet thrive.
Acupuncture & Traditional Chinese Veterinary Medicine
At Natural Animal Clinic, we offer acupuncture through traditional needling, electro-acupuncture,laser acupuncture, aqua-puncture, and moxibustion.
Acupuncture, a key part of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), promotes natural healing, relieves pain, and improves overall health. It can help prevent disease, manage symptoms, and enhance quality of life.
Dr. Kasia also integrates Chinese Herbal Medicine, carefully selecting herbal formulas to support and enhance treatment outcomes.
Nutrition & Supplement Consultation
Good nutrition is the foundation of pet health. Dr. Kasia specializes in species-appropriate diets that boost immunity, promote healing, and help prevent disease. Poor nutrition weakens the body,making it harder to fight illness and recover. A well-balanced diet and the right supplements can help manage conditions like inflammation, cancer prevention, and chronic disease.
Holistic & Integrative Consultation
We combine conventional and holistic medicine to create a personalised treatment plan for your pet.
This consultation includes a medical history review, in-person exam, and discussion of treatment options.
By addressing underlying imbalances, we support the body’s natural healing. Each plan considers age, breed, lifestyle, diet, and health history to ensure the best care for your pet.
Online Veterinary Consultations
For pet owners who can't visit in person, we offer virtual consultations with Dr. Kasia.
These telehealth sessions provide expert advice on pet health, nutrition, holistic treatments, and follow-up care—all from the comfort of your home.
Grey Muzzle Club – Palliative & End-of-Life Care
Dedicated to senior pets, this service helps families manage conditions like cancer, organ failure, arthritis, neurological diseases, and dementia.
We offer:
• Personalized care plans with scheduled home visits
• Ongoing monitoring to adjust treatment and improve comfort
• Quality-of-life assessments and emotional support
• Peaceful in-home euthanasia when needed
Osteopathy for Pets
Osteopathy improves mobility, relieves muscle tension, and supports the body's natural healing.
Our osteopath, Philip Clarke, brings 25 years of human osteopathy experience and 5 years specializing in animal therapy, ensuring gentle, effective treatment.
Meet Dr. Kasia – Expert in Integrative Veterinary Medicine
Dr. Kasia is a highly skilled integrative veterinarian with a decade of experience in holistic and conventional veterinary medicine. She is dedicated to provide the best possible care by bridging the gaps often overlooked by mainstream treatments.
Passionate about exploring alternative therapies, Dr. Kasia specializes in cases where traditional medicine encounters challenges, seeking solutions beyond the limitations of conventional practice. She continuously expands her expertise to improve patient outcomes, ensuring that every pet receives comprehensive,natural, and effective care.
A Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) graduate from Wroclaw University (2015),
Dr. Kasia holds advanced certifications in:
- Acupuncture
- TCVM Food Therapy
- Natural Nutrition
Her mission is to empower pet owners with knowledge and provide personalised,holistic solutions for lifelong pet health and well-being.
Brilliant vet Kasia does acupuncture on my darling old lady husky, Nykita, who will be 17yo in March. It helps her stay happy & mobile and keeps her appetite healthy. Highly recommend this service and of course the lovely Kasia.
DEBORAH JANE HARRISON
Happy Customer
Kasia is amazing! Through acupuncture she has massively improved my westie, Paisley's, condition. He's always excited to see Kasia. She has a natural affinity with animals and explains everything well. Thank you Kasia for giving me my old dog back.
STEPH WATSON
Happy Customer
My little dog Benji, has been receiving accupuncture treatment from Kasia for some time now. It has been primarily for stiffness in his joints and also a recurring colitis problem. I have really noticed the benefits for him. He is very calm after treatment. He rarely limps
DAWN JOUGHIN
Happy Customer
Your First Appointment at Natural Animal Clinic
Before your initial visit, please download and complete the Registration Form.
If your primary care veterinarian is referring you or if you are a vet referring a patient, kindly download and fill out the Referral Form.
Ensure all completed forms are sent to
contact@naturalanimal.clinic before your appointment.
ASKED QUESTIONS
We are Ready For Your Any Questions
Health can be defined as the balance in an individual’s body as well as the balance between body and mind and between the individual and their environment.
Traditional Chinese Veterinary Medicine (TCVM) has four main components: acupuncture, herbal medicine, food therapy, and Tui-na (medical manipulation). Acupuncture usually involves the insertion of thin sterile needles into discrete and specific points on the body in order to cause a therapeutic effect but may include other methods such as electrical stimulation and moxibustion. The point on the body is called the “Shu-Xue” acupuncture point (acupoint). The ancient Chinese discovered 361 acupoints in humans and 173 acupoints in animals.
Acupuncture has been practiced in both animals and humans for thousands of years in China. The earliest veterinary acupuncture book, “Bo Le Zhen Jing” (Bole’s Canon of Veterinary Acupuncture), is believed to have been written by Dr. Bo Le in the Qin-mu-gong period (659 B.C.E. to 621 B.C.E.). Veterinary treatment protocols using acupuncture are well-documented in this textbook. Since then, acupuncture has been a part of the mainstream veterinary medical system in China
Modern research shows that acupoints are located in areas where there is a high density of free nerve endings, mast cells, small arterioles, and lymphatic vessels. Most acupoints are motor points. A great number of studies indicate that the stimulation of acupoints induces the release of beta-endorphins, serotonin, and other neurotransmitters. The US National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine (www.pubmed.gov) has a total of 34,561 research papers regarding acupuncture and 505 animal-specific articles as of February 2021.
Qi (pronounced “chee”) is life force or vital energy. There are two contrasting forms of Qi: Yin and Yang. Yin energy tends to be cool, dark, still, and moving downward, while Yang energy is warm, light, mobile, expanding, and moving upward. Physiologically, Qi flows throughout the body all the time, maintaining a balance of Yin and Yang. When the flow of Qi is interrupted by any pathological factor (such as a viral or bacterial infection), the balance of Yin and Yang will be disrupted and consequently, a disease may occur. Pain is interpreted as the blockage of Qi flow. Acupuncture stimulation resolves this blockage, freeing the flow of Oi and enabling the body to heal itself. Homeostasis is restored when Yin and Yang Qi are in balance.
A Channel or Meridian is where Oi flows inside the body. There are 12 Regular Channels and 8 Extraordinary Channels. The most commonly used acupuncture points are located along these Channels. Each Regular Channel is related to specific paired organs. The network of Channels is called the Jing-Luo system.
Yes! Acupuncture is a very safe medical procedure when administered by a qualified practitioner. Very few negative effects have been found in clinical cases.
Each session may take 20 to 45 minutes; the first session usually takes longer than follow-up appointments.
Some results can be seen immediately but others will require several treatments. Generally, a minimum of 3 to 5 treatments 1-2 weeks apart for chronic conditions are needed before one can expect notable improvement.
As in all medicine, this depends on the situation, and treatments can be done daily, weekly, monthly, or even further apart depending on the severity and chronicity of the condition.
Rarely! Acupuncture is not painful because acupuncture points are stimulated using very fine needles, almost as thin as hair. Over 95% of patients are comfortable with acupuncture therapy. Due to the relaxation effect, some animals will fall asleep during acupuncture treatments. In general, sedation is not needed before an acupuncture treatment.
Only licensed veterinarians are qualified to practice veterinary acupuncture.
Studies have shown that acupuncture stimulation induces the following physiological effects:
Pain relief
Promotion of tissue healing processes
Regulation of gastrointestinal motility Anti-inflammatory effects
Immunoregulation
Hormone and reproductive regulation
Antifebrile effects
Clinical trials indicate that acupuncture therapy can be effective in the following conditions:
1) Musculoskeletal problems: muscle soreness, back pain, osteoarthritis, and degenerative joint disease
2) Neurological disorders: seizures, intervertebral disc disease (IVDD), laryngeal hemiplegia, and facial and radial nerve paralysis
3) Gastrointestinal disorders: diarrhea, gastric ulcers, colic, vomiting, constipation, and impactions
4) Other chronic conditions: skin problems, heaves, asthma, cough, uveitis, renal failure, chronic liver diseases, behavioral problems, infertility, Cushing’s disease, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, geriatric weakness, and anhidrosis
5) Quality of life, cancer, and hospice care
6) Performance enhancement and the prevention of disease