Emergency line live 24/7. Average dispatch target under 30 minutes in major cities.
Clinical Guidance
How to assess symptoms and act early
For dental care in Taghazout, watch early signs such as severe tooth pain, gum swelling, facial swelling, or fever.
Read full symptom and waiting guide
Dental triage is driven by pain progression, swelling spread, fever, and ability to eat or drink. Early action prevents deep infection and avoidable emergency complications.
When to request same-day medical help
Tooth pain persists beyond 24 hours or keeps returning.
Gum swelling, jaw pain, or bad taste is worsening.
Pain is preventing sleep, chewing, or hydration.
Post-procedure symptoms are increasing instead of improving.
Emergency warning signs (call now)
Facial or neck swelling with difficulty swallowing or breathing.
High fever with severe dental pain or spreading infection signs.
Uncontrolled bleeding after extraction or oral trauma.
Rapid deterioration with dehydration or confusion.
What to do while waiting for the doctor
Keep the patient upright if swelling is present.
Use only safe previously tolerated pain control.
Rinse gently with lukewarm salt water if tolerated.
Prepare dental history, allergies, and recent procedures.
Good outcomes usually come from early escalation, clear symptom tracking, and disciplined waiting steps.
This guide is educational and does not replace medical diagnosis.