Kmata Shikaishikai Kyujituoukyu Office
This is not your regular dental clinic — it’s an emergency dental service run by the Kamata Dental Association, specifically for holidays and days when your usual dentist is closed. Think of it as the dental equivalent of an urgent care clinic. It operates out of Shin-Kamata in Ota Ward, which is a pretty accessible part of southwest Tokyo. You come here when a tooth is killing you on New Year’s Day or a Sunday and you can’t wait until Monday. Services are basic emergency triage: pain relief, temporary fixes, extractions if necessary. Don’t expect cosmetic work or long-term treatment plans. The website has some English text, but this is fundamentally a Japanese public health facility staffed by rotating local dentists. English capability will vary completely depending on which dentist is on duty that day. Bring a translation app, write down your symptoms in Japanese if you can, and keep expectations realistic. This place exists to get you out of pain, not to be your forever dentist.
Patient Feedback
Patient experiences here are shaped entirely by the emergency context — people show up in pain and are generally relieved just to be seen. Wait times on busy holidays can stretch long since walk-ins are common. The rotating dentist system means quality and bedside manner vary visit to visit. Most patients report getting effective short-term relief. Nobody’s raving about the decor or the chat. It does what it’s supposed to do.
English Language Proficiency
For translating forms, prescriptions, or discharge summaries, Jozu is worth having on your phone.
Contact & Location
-
03-3822-4112 -
https://www.kamashi.jp/holiday/
-
東京都大田区新蒲田1-4-14
-
Kamata Station (Keikyu Line) — 3 min walk
| Monday | ||
| Tuesday | ||
| Wednesday | ||
| Thursday | ||
| Friday | ||
| Saturday | ||
| Sunday | ||
Ready to Book Your Appointment?
A few things to keep in mind:
- Check the doctor's consultation hours listed above.
- Some clinics require appointments 2-3 days in advance.
- Include your preferred dates and times when reaching out.
- Mention if you need English-speaking staff assistance.
Need a phone script in Japanese? Click here.
Other scripts: Cancel/Reschedule · Describe Symptoms · Pharmacy · Emergency · Dental